AbstractWe study parallel complexity of signed graphs motivated by the highly complex genetic recombination processes in ciliates. The molecular gene assembly operations have been modeled by operations of signed graphs, i.e., graphs where the vertices have a sign + or −. In the optimization problem for signed graphs one wishes to find the parallel complexity by which the graphs can be reduced to the empty graph. We relate parallel complexity to matchings in graphs for some natural graph classes, especially bipartite graphs. It is shown, for instance, that a bipartite graph G has parallel complexity one if and only if G has a unique perfect matching. We also formulate some open problems of this research topic
In this thesis we examine three problems in graph theory and propose efficient parallel algorithms f...
We investigate the computational complexity of a combinatorial problem that arises in DNA sequencing...
We give tight bounds on the parallel complexity of some problems involving random graphs. Speci call...
AbstractWe study parallel complexity of signed graphs motivated by the highly complex genetic recomb...
AbstractWe consider a graph-based model for the process of gene assembly in ciliates, as proposed in...
AbstractWe consider a graph-theoretical formalization of the process of gene assembly in ciliates in...
peer reviewedWe previously introduced the concept of “set-complexity”, based on a context-dependent ...
AbstractWe present in this paper a graph theoretical model of gene assembly, where (segments of) gen...
A model for DNA recombination uses 4-valent rigid vertex graphs, called assembly graphs. An assembly...
AbstractWe describe a graph reduction operation, generalizing three graph reduction operations relat...
Spatial graphs with 4–valent rigid vertices and two single valent endpoints, called assembly graphs,...
AbstractThe concept of breakpoint graph, known from the theory of sorting by reversal, has been succ...
Summary. Gene assembly in ciliates is a life process fascinating from both the biological and the co...
Motivated by genome rearrangements that take place in some species of ciliates we introduce a combin...
AbstractThe intensive study of fast parallel and distributed algorithms for various routing (and com...
In this thesis we examine three problems in graph theory and propose efficient parallel algorithms f...
We investigate the computational complexity of a combinatorial problem that arises in DNA sequencing...
We give tight bounds on the parallel complexity of some problems involving random graphs. Speci call...
AbstractWe study parallel complexity of signed graphs motivated by the highly complex genetic recomb...
AbstractWe consider a graph-based model for the process of gene assembly in ciliates, as proposed in...
AbstractWe consider a graph-theoretical formalization of the process of gene assembly in ciliates in...
peer reviewedWe previously introduced the concept of “set-complexity”, based on a context-dependent ...
AbstractWe present in this paper a graph theoretical model of gene assembly, where (segments of) gen...
A model for DNA recombination uses 4-valent rigid vertex graphs, called assembly graphs. An assembly...
AbstractWe describe a graph reduction operation, generalizing three graph reduction operations relat...
Spatial graphs with 4–valent rigid vertices and two single valent endpoints, called assembly graphs,...
AbstractThe concept of breakpoint graph, known from the theory of sorting by reversal, has been succ...
Summary. Gene assembly in ciliates is a life process fascinating from both the biological and the co...
Motivated by genome rearrangements that take place in some species of ciliates we introduce a combin...
AbstractThe intensive study of fast parallel and distributed algorithms for various routing (and com...
In this thesis we examine three problems in graph theory and propose efficient parallel algorithms f...
We investigate the computational complexity of a combinatorial problem that arises in DNA sequencing...
We give tight bounds on the parallel complexity of some problems involving random graphs. Speci call...