A $(p,q)$-coloring of a graph $G$ is an edge-coloring of $G$ such that every $p$-clique receives at least $q$ colors. In 1975, Erd\H{o}s and Shelah introduced the generalized Ramsey number $f(n,p,q)$ which is the minimum number of colors needed in a $(p,q)$-coloring of $K_n$. In 1997, Erd\H{o}s and Gy\'arf\'as showed that $f(n,p,q)$ is at most a constant times $n^{\frac{p-2}{\binom{p}{2} - q + 1}}$. Very recently the first author, Dudek, and English improved this bound by a factor of $\log n^{\frac{-1}{\binom{p}{2} - q + 1}} $ for all $q \le \frac{p^2 - 26p + 55}{4}$, and they ask if this improvement could hold for a wider range of $q$. We answer this in the affirmative for the entire non-integral regime, that is, for all integers $p, q$ ...
AbstractGiven graphs G and H, a coloring of E(G) is called an (H,q)-coloring if the edges of every c...
We study problems in extremal combinatorics with respect to forbidden induced subgraphs, forbidden ...
Given graphs $G$, $H_1$, and $H_2$, let $G\xrightarrow{\text{mr}}(H_1,H_2)$ denote the property that...
The generalized Ramsey number $f(n, p, q)$ is the smallest number of colors needed to color the edge...
Fix positive integers p and q with [equation; see abstract in PDF for details]. An edge coloring of...
Fix positive integers p and q with [equation; see abstract in PDF for details]. An edge coloring of...
Fix positive integers p and q with 2 ≤ q ≤ (p2). An edge coloring of the complete graph Kn is said t...
AbstractGiven graphs G and H, a coloring of E(G) is called an (H,q)-coloring if the edges of every c...
Fix positive integers p and q with 2 ≤ q ≤ (p2). An edge coloring of the complete graph Kn is said t...
Fix positive integers p and q with 2 ≤ q ≤ (p2). An edge coloring of the complete graph Kn is said t...
AbstractThe Ramsey number M(p,q) is the greatest integer such that for each n<M(p,q), it is possible...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/43187/1/10998_2005_Article_BF02018466.p...
AbstractWe investigate the minimum and maximum number of colors in edge-colorings of Kn,n such that ...
Resolving a problem of Conlon, Fox, and R\"{o}dl, we construct a family of hypergraphs with arbitrar...
The authors investigate Ramsey-type extremal problems for finite graphs. In Section 1, anti-Ramsey n...
AbstractGiven graphs G and H, a coloring of E(G) is called an (H,q)-coloring if the edges of every c...
We study problems in extremal combinatorics with respect to forbidden induced subgraphs, forbidden ...
Given graphs $G$, $H_1$, and $H_2$, let $G\xrightarrow{\text{mr}}(H_1,H_2)$ denote the property that...
The generalized Ramsey number $f(n, p, q)$ is the smallest number of colors needed to color the edge...
Fix positive integers p and q with [equation; see abstract in PDF for details]. An edge coloring of...
Fix positive integers p and q with [equation; see abstract in PDF for details]. An edge coloring of...
Fix positive integers p and q with 2 ≤ q ≤ (p2). An edge coloring of the complete graph Kn is said t...
AbstractGiven graphs G and H, a coloring of E(G) is called an (H,q)-coloring if the edges of every c...
Fix positive integers p and q with 2 ≤ q ≤ (p2). An edge coloring of the complete graph Kn is said t...
Fix positive integers p and q with 2 ≤ q ≤ (p2). An edge coloring of the complete graph Kn is said t...
AbstractThe Ramsey number M(p,q) is the greatest integer such that for each n<M(p,q), it is possible...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/43187/1/10998_2005_Article_BF02018466.p...
AbstractWe investigate the minimum and maximum number of colors in edge-colorings of Kn,n such that ...
Resolving a problem of Conlon, Fox, and R\"{o}dl, we construct a family of hypergraphs with arbitrar...
The authors investigate Ramsey-type extremal problems for finite graphs. In Section 1, anti-Ramsey n...
AbstractGiven graphs G and H, a coloring of E(G) is called an (H,q)-coloring if the edges of every c...
We study problems in extremal combinatorics with respect to forbidden induced subgraphs, forbidden ...
Given graphs $G$, $H_1$, and $H_2$, let $G\xrightarrow{\text{mr}}(H_1,H_2)$ denote the property that...