Forbidden Induced Subgraph Characterization of Word-Representable Split Graphs
Eshwar Srinivasan, Ramesh Hariharasubramanian

TL;DR
This paper characterizes semi-transitive split graphs by identifying minimal forbidden induced subgraphs using a new matrix property called the I-circular property, linking graph structure with matrix representations.
Contribution
Introduces the I-circular property and provides a complete forbidden submatrix characterization for semi-transitive split graphs.
Findings
Established a connection between semi-transitive split graphs and matrix properties.
Provided a forbidden submatrix characterization for the I-circular property.
Characterized semi-transitive split graphs via minimal forbidden induced subgraphs.
Abstract
The class of word-representable graphs, introduced in connection with the study of the Perkins semigroup by Kitaev and Seif, has attracted significant attention in combinatorics and theoretical computer science due to its deep connections with graph orientations and combinatorics on words. A graph is word-representable if and only if it admits a semi-transitive orientation, which is an acyclic orientation such that for any directed path with , either there is no arc between and , or, for all , there exists an arc from to . Split graphs, whose vertex set can be partitioned into a clique and an independent set, constitute a natural yet nontrivial subclass for studying word-representability. However, not all split graphs are semi-transitive, and the characterization of minimal…
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Taxonomy
Topicssemigroups and automata theory · Advanced Graph Theory Research · Limits and Structures in Graph Theory
