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This volume comprises 17 contributions that present advanced topics in graph domination, featuring open problems, modern techniques, and recent results. The book is divided into 3 parts. The first part focuses on several domination-related concepts: broadcast domination, alliances, domatic numbers, dominator colorings, irredundance in graphs, private neighbor concepts, game domination, varieties of Roman domination and spectral graph theory. The second part covers domination in hypergraphs, chessboards, and digraphs and tournaments. The third part focuses on the development of algorithms and complexity of signed, minus and majority domination, power domination, and alliances in graphs. The third part also includes a chapter on self-stabilizing algorithms. Of extra benefit to the reader, the first chapter includes a glossary of commonly used terms. The book is intended to provide a reference for established researchers in the fields of domination and graph theory and graduate students who wish to gain knowledge of the topics covered as well as an overview of the major accomplishments and proof techniques used in the field.
1. Glossary of Common Terms (Haynes).- Part 1. Related Parameters: 2. Broadcast Domination in Graphs (MacGillivray).- 3. Alliances and Related Domination Parameters (Haynes).- 4. Fractional Domatic, Idomatic and Total Domatic Numbers of a Graph (Goddard).- 5. Dominator and Total Dominator Colorings in Graphs (Henning).- 6. Irredundance (Mynhardt).- 7. The Private Neighbor Concept (McRae).- 8. An Introduction to Game Domination in Graphs (Henning).- 9. Domination and Spectral Graph Theory (Hoppen).- 10. Varieties of Roman Domination (Chellali).- Part 2. Domination in Selected Graph Families: 11. Domination and Total Domination in Hypergraphs (Yeo).- 12. Domination in Chessboards (Hedetniemi).- 13. Domination in Digraphs (Haynes).- Part 3. Algorithms and Complexity: 14. Algorithms and Complexity of Signed, Minus and Majority Domination (McRae).- 15. Algorithms and Complexity of Power Domination in Graphs (Mohan).- 16. Self-Stabilizing Domination Algorithms (Hedetniemi).- 17. Algorithms and Complexity of Alliances in Graphs (Hedetniemi)
Show moreThis volume comprises 17 contributions that present advanced topics in graph domination, featuring open problems, modern techniques, and recent results. The book is divided into 3 parts. The first part focuses on several domination-related concepts: broadcast domination, alliances, domatic numbers, dominator colorings, irredundance in graphs, private neighbor concepts, game domination, varieties of Roman domination and spectral graph theory. The second part covers domination in hypergraphs, chessboards, and digraphs and tournaments. The third part focuses on the development of algorithms and complexity of signed, minus and majority domination, power domination, and alliances in graphs. The third part also includes a chapter on self-stabilizing algorithms. Of extra benefit to the reader, the first chapter includes a glossary of commonly used terms. The book is intended to provide a reference for established researchers in the fields of domination and graph theory and graduate students who wish to gain knowledge of the topics covered as well as an overview of the major accomplishments and proof techniques used in the field.
1. Glossary of Common Terms (Haynes).- Part 1. Related Parameters: 2. Broadcast Domination in Graphs (MacGillivray).- 3. Alliances and Related Domination Parameters (Haynes).- 4. Fractional Domatic, Idomatic and Total Domatic Numbers of a Graph (Goddard).- 5. Dominator and Total Dominator Colorings in Graphs (Henning).- 6. Irredundance (Mynhardt).- 7. The Private Neighbor Concept (McRae).- 8. An Introduction to Game Domination in Graphs (Henning).- 9. Domination and Spectral Graph Theory (Hoppen).- 10. Varieties of Roman Domination (Chellali).- Part 2. Domination in Selected Graph Families: 11. Domination and Total Domination in Hypergraphs (Yeo).- 12. Domination in Chessboards (Hedetniemi).- 13. Domination in Digraphs (Haynes).- Part 3. Algorithms and Complexity: 14. Algorithms and Complexity of Signed, Minus and Majority Domination (McRae).- 15. Algorithms and Complexity of Power Domination in Graphs (Mohan).- 16. Self-Stabilizing Domination Algorithms (Hedetniemi).- 17. Algorithms and Complexity of Alliances in Graphs (Hedetniemi)
Show more1. Glossary of Common Terms (Haynes).- Part 1. Related Parameters: 2. Broadcast Domination in Graphs (MacGillivray).- 3. Alliances and Related Domination Parameters (Haynes).- 4. Fractional Domatic, Idomatic and Total Domatic Numbers of a Graph (Goddard).- 5. Dominator and Total Dominator Colorings in Graphs (Henning).- 6. Irredundance (Mynhardt).- 7. The Private Neighbor Concept (McRae).- 8. An Introduction to Game Domination in Graphs (Henning).- 9. Domination and Spectral Graph Theory (Hoppen).- 10. Varieties of Roman Domination (Chellali).- Part 2. Domination in Selected Graph Families: 11. Domination and Total Domination in Hypergraphs (Yeo).- 12. Domination in Chessboards (Hedetniemi).- 13. Domination in Digraphs (Haynes).- Part 3. Algorithms and Complexity: 14. Algorithms and Complexity of Signed, Minus and Majority Domination (McRae).- 15. Algorithms and Complexity of Power Domination in Graphs (Mohan).- 16. Self-Stabilizing Domination Algorithms (Hedetniemi).- 17. Algorithms and Complexity of Alliances in Graphs (Hedetniemi)
Teresa W. Haynes has focused her research on domination
in graphs for over 30 years and is perhaps best known for
coauthoring the 1998 book Fundamentals of Domination in
Graphs and the companion volume Domination in Graphs:
Advanced Topics. She has also co-edited 2 volumes in
Springer’s Problem Books in
Mathematics Graph Theory: Favorite Conjectures and
Open Problems. Haynes is also a co-author of
the Springer Briefs in Mathematics From
Domination to Coloring: The Graph Theory of Stephen T.
Hedetniemi. Upon receiving her PhD from the University of
Central Florida in 1988, she joined East Tennessee State
University, where she is currently professor in the Department of
Mathematics and Statistics. Haynes has coauthored more than
200 papers on domination and domination-related concepts, which
introduced some of the most studied concepts in domination, such as
power domination, paired domination, double domination, alliances
and broadcasts in graphs, and stratified domination.
Stephen T. Hedetniemi is one of the earliest
pioneers of domination in graphs along with E. J. Cockayne, who
together proposed the theory of domination in graphs, in one of the
most cited papers in the field in 1977. He received his PhD
from the University of Michigan in 1966, with two world-class
advisors, graph theorist Frank Harary, and the pioneer of genetic
algorithms and MacArthur Fellowship winner, John Holland. He
coauthored, the first book on domination in 1988 Fundamentals
of Domination in Graphs, and co-edited a second
book, Domination in Graphs: Advanced Topics. He also co-edited
2 volumes in Springer’s Problem Books in
Mathematics Graph Theory: Favorite Conjectures and
Open Problems. Since 1974 he has coauthored morethan 300 papers,
180 of which are on domination and domination-related
concepts. Hedetniemi has introduced some of the most-studied
concepts in domination theory, including total domination,
independent domination, irredundance, Roman domination, power
domination, alliances in graphs, signed and minus domination,
fractional domination, domatic numbers, domination in grid graphs
and chessboards, the first domination algorithms, the first
domination NP-completeness results, and the first self-stabilizing
domination algorithms. After leaving the University of
Michigan, he taught computer science at the University of Iowa, and
the University of Virginia, spent a visiting year at the University
of Victoria with E. J. Cockayne, and then became department head of
Computer and information Science at the University of Oregon.
Since 1982 has been at Clemson University, where he served a
five-year term as department head, and served on the Executive
Committee of the Computing Accreditation Commission of ABET, Inc.
He is currently Emeritus Professor of Computer Science in the
School of Computing at Clemson University.
Michael A. Henning has devoted much of his research interests to the field of domination theory in graphs. He has been both plenary and invited speakers at several international conferences and is a prolific researcher having published over 460 papers to date in international mathematics journals. Henning was born and schooled in South Africa having obtained his PhD at the University of Natal in April 1989. In January 1989, he started his academic career as a lecturer at the University of Zululand, before accepting a lectureship in mathematics at the former University of Natal in January 1991. In January 2000, he was appointed a full professor at the University of Natal, which later merged with the University of Durban-Westville to form the University of KwaZulu-Natal in January 2004. After spending almost 20 years at the University of KwaZulu-Natal and one of its predecessors, the University of Natal, Michael moved to the University of Johannesburg in May 2010 as a research professor. He co-authored a Springer Briefs in Mathematics From Domination to Coloring: The Graph Theory of Stephen T. Hedetniemi and co-authored the Springer Monographs in Mathematics book Total Domination in Graphs and in 2020, he co-authored Springer’s Developments in Mathematics book Transversals in Linear Uniform Hypergraphs.
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