Graph searching is used to model a variety of problems and has close connections to variations of path-decomposition. This work explores Monotone Connected Mixed Search. Metaphorically, we consider this problem in terms of searchers exploring a network of tunnels and rooms to locate an opponent. In one turn this opponent moves arbitrarily fast while the searchers may only move to adjacent rooms. The objective is, given an arbitrary graph, to determine the minimum number of searchers for which there exist a valid series of moves that searches the graph. We show that the family of graphs requiring at most k searchers is closed under graph contraction. We exploit the close ties between the contraction ordering and the minor ordering to produce...
International audienceIn the graph searching game the opponents are a set of searchers and a fugitiv...
International audienceGraph searching was introduced by Parson [T. Parson, Pursuit-evasion in a grap...
AbstractWe relate the search number of an undirected graph G with the minimum and maximum of the pro...
We consider the connected variant of the classic mixed search game where, in each search step, clean...
AbstractIn the graph searching game the opponents are a set of searchers and a fugitive in a graph. ...
In graph searching game the opponents are a set of searchers and a fugitive in a graph. The searcher...
In the graph searching problem, we are given a graph whose edges are all "contaminated", and, via a ...
This paper is concerned with the graph searching game. The search number es(G) of a graph G is the s...
AbstractSearch games are attractive for their correspondence with classical width parameters. For in...
International audienceSearch games are attractive for their correspondence with classical width para...
International audienceGraph searching is a game where a team of mobile agents must catch a fugitive ...
International audienceIn Graph Searching, a team of searchers aims at capturing an invisible fugitiv...
We consider the mixed search game against an agile and visible fugitive. This is the variant of the ...
International audienceThis paper tackles the well known graph searching problem, where a team of sea...
AbstractThis paper considers a mixed search game, which is a natural generalization of edge-search a...
International audienceIn the graph searching game the opponents are a set of searchers and a fugitiv...
International audienceGraph searching was introduced by Parson [T. Parson, Pursuit-evasion in a grap...
AbstractWe relate the search number of an undirected graph G with the minimum and maximum of the pro...
We consider the connected variant of the classic mixed search game where, in each search step, clean...
AbstractIn the graph searching game the opponents are a set of searchers and a fugitive in a graph. ...
In graph searching game the opponents are a set of searchers and a fugitive in a graph. The searcher...
In the graph searching problem, we are given a graph whose edges are all "contaminated", and, via a ...
This paper is concerned with the graph searching game. The search number es(G) of a graph G is the s...
AbstractSearch games are attractive for their correspondence with classical width parameters. For in...
International audienceSearch games are attractive for their correspondence with classical width para...
International audienceGraph searching is a game where a team of mobile agents must catch a fugitive ...
International audienceIn Graph Searching, a team of searchers aims at capturing an invisible fugitiv...
We consider the mixed search game against an agile and visible fugitive. This is the variant of the ...
International audienceThis paper tackles the well known graph searching problem, where a team of sea...
AbstractThis paper considers a mixed search game, which is a natural generalization of edge-search a...
International audienceIn the graph searching game the opponents are a set of searchers and a fugitiv...
International audienceGraph searching was introduced by Parson [T. Parson, Pursuit-evasion in a grap...
AbstractWe relate the search number of an undirected graph G with the minimum and maximum of the pro...