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In the mathematical field of
graph theory In mathematics, graph theory is the study of '' graphs'', which are mathematical structures used to model pairwise relations between objects. A graph in this context is made up of '' vertices'' (also called ''nodes'' or ''points'') which are conn ...
, a word-representable graph is a
graph Graph may refer to: Mathematics *Graph (discrete mathematics), a structure made of vertices and edges **Graph theory, the study of such graphs and their properties *Graph (topology), a topological space resembling a graph in the sense of discre ...
that can be characterized by a word (or sequence) whose entries alternate in a prescribed way. In particular, if the vertex set of the graph is ''V'', one should be able to choose a word ''w'' over the alphabet ''V'' such that letters ''a'' and ''b'' alternate in ''w'' if and only if the pair ''ab'' is an edge in the graph. (Letters ''a'' and ''b'' alternate in ''w'' if, after removing from ''w'' all letters but the copies of ''a'' and ''b'', one obtains a word ''abab''... or a word ''baba''....) For example, the
cycle graph In graph theory, a cycle graph or circular graph is a graph that consists of a single cycle, or in other words, some number of vertices (at least 3, if the graph is simple) connected in a closed chain. The cycle graph with vertices is called ...
labeled by ''a'', ''b'', ''c'' and ''d'' in clock-wise direction is word-representable because it can be represented by ''abdacdbc'': the pairs ''ab'', ''bc'', ''cd'' and ''ad'' alternate, but the pairs ''ac'' and ''bd'' do not. The word ''w'' is ''G'''s ''word-representant'', and one says that that ''w'' ''represents'' ''G''. The smallest (by the number of  vertices) non-word-representable graph is the
wheel graph A wheel is a circular component that is intended to rotate on an axle bearing. The wheel is one of the key components of the wheel and axle which is one of the six simple machines. Wheels, in conjunction with axles, allow heavy objects to be ...
''W''5, which is the only non-word-representable graph on 6 vertices. The definition of a word-representable graph works both in labelled and unlabelled cases since any labelling of a graph is equivalent to any other labelling. Also, the class of word-representable graphs is
hereditary Heredity, also called inheritance or biological inheritance, is the passing on of traits from parents to their offspring; either through asexual reproduction or sexual reproduction, the offspring cells or organisms acquire the genetic infor ...
. Word-representable graphs generalise several important classes of graphs such as
circle graph In graph theory, a circle graph is the intersection graph of a chord diagram. That is, it is an undirected graph whose vertices can be associated with a finite system of chords of a circle such that two vertices are adjacent if and only if th ...
s, 3-colorable graphs and
comparability graph In graph theory, a comparability graph is an undirected graph that connects pairs of elements that are comparable to each other in a partial order. Comparability graphs have also been called transitively orientable graphs, partially orderable graph ...
s. Various generalisations of the theory of word-representable graphs accommodate representation of ''any'' graph.


History

Word-representable graphs were introduced by Sergey Kitaev in 2004 based on joint research with Steven SeifS. Kitaev and S. Seif. Word problem of the Perkins semigroup via directed acyclic graphs, Order 25 (2008), 177−194. on the '' Perkins semigroup'', which has played an important role in semigroup theory since 1960.S. Kitaev and V. Lozin. Words and Graphs, Springer, 2015.
The first systematic study of word-representable graphs was undertaken in a 2008 paper by Kitaev and Artem Pyatkin,S. Kitaev and A. Pyatkin. On representable graphs, J. Autom., Lang. and Combin. 13 (2008), 45−54.
/ref> starting development of the theory. One of key contributors to the area i
Magnús M. Halldórsson
M.M. Halldórsson, S. Kitaev, A. Pyatkin (2010) Graphs capturing alternations in words. In: Y. Gao, H. Lu, S. Seki, S. Yu (eds), Developments in Language Theory. DLT 2010. Lecture Notes Comp. Sci. 6224, Springer, 436−437.
/ref>M.M. Halldórsson, S. Kitaev, A. Pyatkin (2011) Alternation graphs. In: P. Kolman, J. Kratochvíl (eds), Graph-Theoretic Concepts in Computer Science. WG 2011. Lecture Notes Comp. Sci. 6986, Springer, 191−202.
/ref>M. Halldórsson, S. Kitaev and A. Pyatkin. Semi-transitive orientations and word-representable graphs, Discr. Appl. Math. 201 (2016), 164−171.
/ref> Up to date, 35+ papers have been written on the subject, and the core of the book by Sergey Kitaev and Vadim Lozin is devoted to the theory of word-representable graphs. A quick way to get familiar with the area is to read one of the survey articles. S. Kitaev. A comprehensive introduction to the theory of word-representable graphs. In: É. Charlier, J. Leroy, M. Rigo (eds), Developments in Language Theory. DLT 2017. Lecture Notes Comp. Sci. 10396, Springer, 36−67.S. Kitaev and A. Pyatkin. Word-representable graphs: a Survey, Journal of Applied and Industrial Mathematics 12(2) (2018) 278−296.
/ref>С. В. Китаев, А. В. Пяткин. Графы, представимые в виде слов. Обзор результатов, Дискретн. анализ и исслед. опер., 2018, том 25,номер 2, 19−53
/ref>


Motivation to study the graphs

According to, word-representable graphs are relevant to various fields, thus providing a motivation to study the graphs. These fields are
algebra Algebra () is one of the areas of mathematics, broad areas of mathematics. Roughly speaking, algebra is the study of mathematical symbols and the rules for manipulating these symbols in formulas; it is a unifying thread of almost all of mathem ...
,
graph theory In mathematics, graph theory is the study of '' graphs'', which are mathematical structures used to model pairwise relations between objects. A graph in this context is made up of '' vertices'' (also called ''nodes'' or ''points'') which are conn ...
,
computer science Computer science is the study of computation, automation, and information. Computer science spans theoretical disciplines (such as algorithms, theory of computation, information theory, and automation) to practical disciplines (includin ...
, combinatorics on words, and
scheduling A schedule or a timetable, as a basic time-management tool, consists of a list of times at which possible tasks, events, or actions are intended to take place, or of a sequence of events in the chronological order in which such things are i ...
. Word-representable graphs are especially important in graph theory, since they generalise several important classes of graphs, e.g.
circle graph In graph theory, a circle graph is the intersection graph of a chord diagram. That is, it is an undirected graph whose vertices can be associated with a finite system of chords of a circle such that two vertices are adjacent if and only if th ...
s, 3-colorable graphs and
comparability graph In graph theory, a comparability graph is an undirected graph that connects pairs of elements that are comparable to each other in a partial order. Comparability graphs have also been called transitively orientable graphs, partially orderable graph ...
s.


Early results

It was shown in that a graph ''G'' is word-representable iff it is k-representable for some ''k'', that is, ''G'' can be represented by a word having ''k'' copies of each letter. Moreover, if a graph is ''k''-representable then it is also (''k'' + 1)-representable. Thus, the notion of the representation number of a graph, as the ''minimum'' ''k'' such that a graph is word-representable, is well-defined. Non-word-representable graphs have the representation number ∞. Graphs with representation number 1 are precisely the set of
complete graph In the mathematical field of graph theory, a complete graph is a simple undirected graph in which every pair of distinct vertices is connected by a unique edge. A complete digraph is a directed graph in which every pair of distinct vertices ...
s, while graphs with representation number 2 are precisely the class of
circle A circle is a shape consisting of all points in a plane that are at a given distance from a given point, the centre. Equivalently, it is the curve traced out by a point that moves in a plane so that its distance from a given point is const ...
non-complete graphs. In particular
forests
(except for single
trees In botany, a tree is a perennial plant with an elongated stem, or trunk, usually supporting branches and leaves. In some usages, the definition of a tree may be narrower, including only woody plants with secondary growth, plants that are ...
on at most 2 vertices),
ladder graph In the mathematical field of graph theory, the ladder graph is a planar, undirected graph with vertices and edges. The ladder graph can be obtained as the Cartesian product of two path graphs, one of which has only one edge: . Propertie ...
s and
cycle graph In graph theory, a cycle graph or circular graph is a graph that consists of a single cycle, or in other words, some number of vertices (at least 3, if the graph is simple) connected in a closed chain. The cycle graph with vertices is called ...
s have representation number 2. No classification for graphs with representation number 3 is known. However, there are examples of such graphs, e.g. Petersen's graph an
prisms
Moreover, 3-
subdivision Subdivision may refer to: Arts and entertainment * Subdivision (metre), in music * ''Subdivision'' (film), 2009 * "Subdivision", an episode of ''Prison Break'' (season 2) * ''Subdivisions'' (EP), by Sinch, 2005 * "Subdivisions" (song), by Rush ...
of any graph is 3-representable. In particular, for every graph ''G'' there exists a 3-representable graph ''H'' that contains ''G'' as a minor. A graph ''G'' is permutationally representable if it can be represented by a word of the form ''p''1''p''2...''pk'', where ''pi'' is a
permutation In mathematics, a permutation of a set is, loosely speaking, an arrangement of its members into a sequence or linear order, or if the set is already ordered, a rearrangement of its elements. The word "permutation" also refers to the act or p ...
. On can also say that ''G'' is permutationally ''k''-representable. A graph is permutationally representable iff it is a
comparability graph In graph theory, a comparability graph is an undirected graph that connects pairs of elements that are comparable to each other in a partial order. Comparability graphs have also been called transitively orientable graphs, partially orderable graph ...
. A graph is word-representable implies that the
neighbourhood A neighbourhood (British English, Irish English, Australian English and Canadian English) or neighborhood (American English; American and British English spelling differences, see spelling differences) is a geographically localised community ...
of each vertex is permutationally representable (i.e. is a
comparability graph In graph theory, a comparability graph is an undirected graph that connects pairs of elements that are comparable to each other in a partial order. Comparability graphs have also been called transitively orientable graphs, partially orderable graph ...
). Converse to the last statement is not true. However, the fact that the
neighbourhood A neighbourhood (British English, Irish English, Australian English and Canadian English) or neighborhood (American English; American and British English spelling differences, see spelling differences) is a geographically localised community ...
of each vertex is a
comparability graph In graph theory, a comparability graph is an undirected graph that connects pairs of elements that are comparable to each other in a partial order. Comparability graphs have also been called transitively orientable graphs, partially orderable graph ...
implies that the Maximum Clique problem is polynomially solvable on word-representable graphs.


Semi-transitive orientations

Semi-transitive orientations provide a powerful tool to study word-representable graphs. A directed graph is semi-transitively oriented iff it i
acyclic
and for any directed path ''u''1→''u''2→ ...→''ut'', ''t'' ≥ 2, either there is no edge from ''u''1 to ''ut'' or all edges ''ui'' → ''uj'' exist for 1 ≤ ''i'' < ''j'' ≤ ''t''. A key theorem in the theory of word-representable graphs states that a graph is word-representable iff it admits a semi-transitive orientation. As a corollary to the proof of the key theorem one obtain an upper bound on word-representants: Each non-complete word-representable graph ''G'' is 2(''n'' − ''κ''(''G''))-representable, where ''κ''(''G'') is the size of a maximal clique in ''G''. As an immediate corollary of the last statement, one has that th
recognition problem
of word-representability is in NP. In 2014
Vincent Limouzy
observed that it is an NP-complete problem to recognise whether a given graph is word-representable. Another important corollary to the key theorem is that any 3-colorable graph is word-representable. The last fact implies that many classical graph problems are NP-hard on word-representable graphs.  


Overview of selected results


Non-word-representable graphs

Wheel graph A wheel is a circular component that is intended to rotate on an axle bearing. The wheel is one of the key components of the wheel and axle which is one of the six simple machines. Wheels, in conjunction with axles, allow heavy objects to be ...
s ''W''2''n''+1, for ''n'' ≥ 2, are not word-representable and ''W''5 is the minimum (by the number of vertices) non-word-representable graph. Taking any non-comparability graph and adding an apex (a vertex connected to any other vertex), we obtain a non-word-representable graph, which then can produce infinitely many non-word-representable graphs. Any graph produced in this way will necessarily have a triangle (a cycle of length 3), and a vertex of degree at least 5. Non-word-representable graphs of maximum degree 4 exist and non-word-representable triangle-free graphs exist. Regular non-word representable graphs also exist. Non-isomorphic non-word-representable connected graphs on at most eight vertices were first enumerated by Heman Z.Q. Chen. His calculations were extended in,Ö. Akgün, I.P. Gent, S. Kitaev, H. Zantema. Solving computational problems in the theory of word-representable graphs. Journal of Integer Sequences 22 (2019), Article 19.2.5.
where it was shown that the numbers of non-isomorphic non-word-representable connected graphs on 5−11 vertices are given, respectively, by 0, 1, 25, 929, 54957, 4880093, 650856040. This is the sequence A290814 in th
Online Encyclopaedia of Integer Sequences (OEIS)


Operations on graphs and word-representability

Operations preserving word-representability are removing a vertex, replacing a vertex with a module, Cartesian product, rooted product, subdivision of a graph, connecting two graphs by an edge and gluing two graphs in a vertex. The operations not necessarily preserving word-representability are taking the complement, taking the line graph, edge contraction, gluing two graphs in a clique of size 2 or more, tensor product, lexicographic product and strong product.I. Choi, J. Kim, and M. Kim. On operations preserving semi-transitive orient ability of graphs, Journal of Combinatorial Optimization 37 (2019) 4, 1351−1366.
/ref> Edge-deletion, edge-addition and edge-lifting with respect to word-representability (equivalently, semi-transitive orientability) are studied in.


Graphs with high representation number

While each non-complete word-representable graph ''G'' is 2(''n'' − ''κ''(''G''))-representable, where ''κ''(''G'') is the size of a maximal clique in ''G'', the highest known representation number is floor(''n''/2) given by crown graphs with an all-adjacent vertex. Interestingly, such graphs are not the only graphs that require long representations.Ö. Akgün, I.P. Gent, S. Kitaev, H. Zantema. Solving computational problems in the theory of word-representable graphs. Journal of Integer Sequences 22 (2019), Article 19.2.5.
/ref> Crown graphs themselves are shown to require long (possibly longest) representations among bipartite graphs.M. Glen, S. Kitaev, and A. Pyatkin. On the representation number of a crown graph, Discr. Appl. Math. 244, 2018, 89–93.
/ref>


Computational complexity

Known computational complexities for problems on word-representable graphs can be summarised as follows:


Representation of planar graphs

Triangle-free
planar graphs In graph theory, a planar graph is a graph that can be embedded in the plane, i.e., it can be drawn on the plane in such a way that its edges intersect only at their endpoints. In other words, it can be drawn in such a way that no edges cross ...
are word-representable. A K4-free near-triangulation is 3-colourable if and only if it is word-representable; M. Glen. Colourability and word-representability of near-triangulations, Pure and Applied Mathematics, to appear, 2019. this result generalises studies in. P. Akrobotu, S. Kitaev, and Z. Masárová. On word-representability of polyomino triangulations. Siberian Adv. Math. 25 (2015), 1−10. M. Glen and S. Kitaev. Word-Representability of Triangulations of Rectangular Polyomino with a Single Domino Tile, J. Combin.Math. Combin. Comput. 100, 131−144, 2017. Word-representability of face subdivisions of triangular grid graphs is studied in T. Z. Q. Chen, S. Kitaev, and B. Y. Sun. Word-representability of face subdivisions of triangular grid graphs, Graphs and Combin. 32(5) (2016), 1749−1761. and word-representability of triangulations of grid-covered cylinder graphs is studied in. T. Z. Q. Chen, S. Kitaev, and B. Y. Sun. Word-representability of triangulations of grid-covered cylinder graphs, Discr. Appl. Math. 213 (2016), 60−70.


Representation of split graphs

Word-representation of
split graph In graph theory, a branch of mathematics, a split graph is a graph in which the vertices can be partitioned into a clique and an independent set. Split graphs were first studied by , and independently introduced by . A split graph may have m ...
s is studied in. S. Kitaev, Y. Long, J. Ma, H. Wu. Word-representability of split graphs, arXiv:1709.09725 (2017). T. Z. Q. Chen, S. Kitaev, and A. Saito. Representing split graphs by words, arXiv:1909.09471 In particular, offers a characterisation in terms of forbidden induced subgraphs of word-representable split graphs in which vertices in the independent set are of degree at most 2, or the size of the clique is 4, while a computational characterisation of word-representable split graphs with the clique of size 5 is given in. Also, necessary and sufficient conditions for an orientation of a split graph to be semi-transitive are given in, while in threshold graphs are shown to be word-representable and the split graphs are used to show that gluing two word-representable graphs in any clique of size at least 2 may, or may not result in a word-representable graph, which solved a long-standing open problem.


Graphs representable by pattern avoiding words

A graph is ''p''-representable if it can be represented by a word avoiding a
pattern A pattern is a regularity in the world, in human-made design, or in abstract ideas. As such, the elements of a pattern repeat in a predictable manner. A geometric pattern is a kind of pattern formed of geometric shapes and typically repeated li ...
''p''. For example, 132-representable graphs are those that can be represented by words ''w''1w2...''wn'' where there are no 1 ≤ ''a'' < ''b'' < ''c'' ≤ ''n'' such that ''wa'' < ''wc'' < ''wb''. In A. Gao, S. Kitaev, and P. Zhang. On 132-representable graphs. Australasian J. Combin. 69 (2017), 105−118. it is shown that any 132-representable graph is necessarily a
circle graph In graph theory, a circle graph is the intersection graph of a chord diagram. That is, it is an undirected graph whose vertices can be associated with a finite system of chords of a circle such that two vertices are adjacent if and only if th ...
, and any
tree In botany, a tree is a perennial plant with an elongated stem, or trunk, usually supporting branches and leaves. In some usages, the definition of a tree may be narrower, including only woody plants with secondary growth, plants that are ...
and any
cycle graph In graph theory, a cycle graph or circular graph is a graph that consists of a single cycle, or in other words, some number of vertices (at least 3, if the graph is simple) connected in a closed chain. The cycle graph with vertices is called ...
, as well as any graph on at most 5 vertices, are 132-representable. It was shown in Mandelshtam. On graphs representable by pattern-avoiding words, Discussiones Mathematicae Graph Theory 39 (2019) 375−389.
/ref> that not all circle graphs are 132-representable, and that 123-representable graphs are also a proper subclass of the class of circle graphs.


Generalisations

A number of generalisations M. Jones, S. Kitaev, A. Pyatkin, and J. Remmel. Representing Graphs via Pattern Avoiding Words, Electron. J. Combin. 22 (2), Res. Pap. P2.53, 1−20 (2015).
/ref>M. Gaetz and C. Ji. Enumeration and extensions of word-representable graphs. Lecture Notes in Computer Science 11682 (2019) 180−192. In R. Mercas, D. Reidenbach (Eds) Combinatorics on Words. WORDS 2019.
/ref> M. Gaetz and C. Ji. Enumeration and Extensions of Word-representants, arXiv:1909.00019. of the notion of a word-representable graph are based on the observation b
Jeff Remmel
that non-edges are defined by occurrences of the pattern 11 (two consecutive equal letters) in a word representing a graph, while edges are defined by avoidance of this pattern. For example, instead of the pattern 11, one can use the pattern 112, or the pattern, 1212, or any other binary pattern where the assumption that the alphabet is ordered can be made so that a letter in a word corresponding to 1 in the pattern is less than that corresponding to 2 in the pattern. Letting ''u'' be an ordered binary pattern we thus get the notion of a ''u''-representable graph. So, word-representable graphs are just the class of 11-representable graphs. Intriguingly, any graph can be ''u''-represented assuming ''u'' is of length at least 3.S. Kitaev. Existence of u-representation of graphs, Journal of Graph Theory 85 (2017) 3, 661−668.
/ref> Another way to generalise the notion of a word-representable graph, again suggested b
Jeff Remmel
is to introduce the "degree of tolerance" ''k'' for occurrences of a pattern ''p'' defining edges/non-edges. That is, we can say that if there are up to ''k'' occurrence of ''p'' formed by letters ''a'' and ''b'', then there is an edge between ''a'' and ''b''. This gives the notion of a ''k''-''p''-representable graph, and ''k''-11-representable graphs are studied in. G.-S. Cheon, J. Kim, M. Kim, and A. Pyatkin. On ''k''-11-representable graphs. J. Combin. 10 (2019) 3, 491−513. Note that 0-11-representable graphs are precisely word-representable graphs. The key results in are that any graph is 2-11-representable and that word-representable graphs are a proper subclass of 1-11-representable graphs. Whether or not any graph is 1-11-representable is a challenging open problem. For yet another type of relevant generalisation, Hans Zantema suggested the notion of a ''k''-semi-transitive orientation refining the notion of a semi-transitive orientation. The idea here is restricting ourselves to considering ''only'' directed paths of length not exceeding ''k'' while allowing violations of semi-transitivity on longer paths.


Open problems

Open problems on word-representable graphs can be found in, and they include: *Characterise (non-)word-representable planar graphs. *Characterise word-representable near-triangulations containing the complete graph ''K''4 (such a characterisation is known for ''K''4-free planar graphs ). *Classify graphs with representation number 3. (See S. Kitaev. On graphs with representation number 3, J. Autom., Lang. and Combin. 18 (2013), 97−112. for the state-of-the-art in this direction.) *Is the
line graph In the mathematical discipline of graph theory, the line graph of an undirected graph is another graph that represents the adjacencies between edges of . is constructed in the following way: for each edge in , make a vertex in ; for every ...
of a non-word-representable graph always non-word-representable? *Are there any graphs on ''n'' vertices whose representation requires more than floor(''n''/2) copies of each letter? *Is it true that out of all
bipartite graph In the mathematical field of graph theory, a bipartite graph (or bigraph) is a graph whose vertices can be divided into two disjoint and independent sets U and V, that is every edge connects a vertex in U to one in V. Vertex sets U and V ar ...
s crown graphs require longest word-representants? (See for relevant discussion.) *Characterise word-representable graphs in terms of (induced) forbidden subgraphs. *Which (hard) problems on graphs can be translated to words representing them and solved on words (efficiently)?


Literature

The list of publications to study representation of graphs by words contains, but is not limited to
Ö. Akgün, I.P. Gent, S. Kitaev, H. Zantema. Solving computational problems in the theory of word-representable graphs. Journal of Integer Sequences 22 (2019), Article 19.2.5.
# P. Akrobotu, S. Kitaev, and Z. Masárová. On word-representability of polyomino triangulations. Siberian Adv. Math. 25 (2015), 1−10. # B. Broere. Word representable graphs, 2018. Master thesis at Radboud University, Nijmegen. # B. Broere and H. Zantema. "The ''k''-cube is ''k''-representable," J. Autom., Lang., and Combin. 24 (2019) 1, 3-12. # J. N. Chen and S. Kitaev. On the 12-representability of induced subgraphs of a grid graph, Discussiones Mathematicae Graph Theory, to appear # T. Z. Q. Chen, S. Kitaev, and A. Saito. Representing split graphs by words, arXiv:1909.09471 # T. Z. Q. Chen, S. Kitaev, and B. Y. Sun. Word-representability of face subdivisions of triangular grid graphs, Graphs and Combin. 32(5) (2016), 1749−1761. # T. Z. Q. Chen, S. Kitaev, and B. Y. Sun. Word-representability of triangulations of grid-covered cylinder graphs, Discr. Appl. Math. 213 (2016), 60−70. # G.-S. Cheon, J. Kim, M. Kim, and S. Kitaev. Word-representability of Toeplitz graphs, Discr. Appl. Math., to appear. # G.-S. Cheon, J. Kim, M. Kim, and A. Pyatkin. On ''k''-11-representable graphs. J. Combin. 10 (2019) 3, 491−513.
I. Choi, J. Kim, and M. Kim. On operations preserving semi-transitive orient ability of graphs, Journal of Combinatorial Optimization 37 (2019) 4, 1351−1366.
# A. Collins, S. Kitaev, and V. Lozin. New results on word-representable graphs, Discr. Appl. Math. 216 (2017), 136−141. # A. Daigavane, M. Singh, B.K. George. 2-uniform words: cycle graphs, and an algorithm to verify specific word-representations of graphs. arXiv:1806.04673 (2018).
M. Gaetz and C. Ji. Enumeration and extensions of word-representable graphs. Lecture Notes in Computer Science 11682 (2019) 180−192. In R. Mercas, D. Reidenbach (Eds) Combinatorics on Words. WORDS 2019.
# M. Gaetz and C. Ji. Enumeration and Extensions of Word-representants, arXiv:1909.00019.
M. Gaetz and C. Ji. Enumeration and Extensions of Word-representants, Combinatorics on words, 180-192, Lecture Notes in Comput. Sci., 11682, Springer, Cham, 2019.
# A. Gao, S. Kitaev, and P. Zhang. On 132-representable graphs. Australasian J. Combin. 69 (2017), 105−118. # M. Glen. Colourability and word-representability of near-triangulations, Pure and Applied Mathematics, to appear, 2019. # M. Glen. On word-representability of polyomino triangulations & crown graphs, 2019. PhD thesis, University of Strathclyde. # M. Glen and S. Kitaev. Word-Representability of Triangulations of Rectangular Polyomino with a Single Domino Tile, J. Combin.Math. Combin. Comput. 100, 131−144, 2017.
M. Glen, S. Kitaev, and A. Pyatkin. On the representation number of a crown graph, Discr. Appl. Math. 244, 2018, 89−93.

M.M. Halldórsson, S. Kitaev, A. Pyatkin On representable graphs, semi-transitive orientations, and the representation numbers, arXiv:0810.0310 (2008).

M.M. Halldórsson, S. Kitaev, A. Pyatkin (2010) Graphs capturing alternations in words. In: Y. Gao, H. Lu, S. Seki, S. Yu (eds), Developments in Language Theory. DLT 2010. Lecture Notes Comp. Sci. 6224, Springer, 436−437.

M.M. Halldórsson, S. Kitaev, A. Pyatkin (2011) Alternation graphs. In: P. Kolman, J. Kratochvíl (eds), Graph-Theoretic Concepts in Computer Science. WG 2011. Lecture Notes Comp. Sci. 6986, Springer, 191−202.
# M. Halldórsson, S. Kitaev and A. Pyatkin. Semi-transitive orientations and word-representable graphs, Discr. Appl. Math. 201 (2016), 164−171.
M. Jones, S. Kitaev, A. Pyatkin, and J. Remmel. Representing Graphs via Pattern Avoiding Words, Electron. J. Combin. 22 (2), Res. Pap. P2.53, 1−20 (2015).
# S. Kitaev. On graphs with representation number 3, J. Autom., Lang. and Combin. 18 (2013), 97−112. # arxiv:1705.05924, S. Kitaev. A comprehensive introduction to the theory of word-representable graphs. In: É. Charlier, J. Leroy, M. Rigo (eds), Developments in Language Theory. DLT 2017. Lecture Notes Comp. Sci. 10396, Springer, 36−67.
S. Kitaev. Existence of u-representation of graphs, Journal of Graph Theory 85 (2017) 3, 661−668.
# S. Kitaev, Y. Long, J. Ma, H. Wu. Word-representability of split graphs, arXiv:1709.09725 (2017). # S. Kitaev and V. Lozin. Words and Graphs, Springer, 2015. .
S. Kitaev and A. Pyatkin. On representable graphs, J. Autom., Lang. and Combin. 13 (2008), 45−54.

S. Kitaev and A. Pyatkin. Word-representable graphs: a Survey, Journal of Applied and Industrial Mathematics 12(2) (2018) 278−296.
# S. Kitaev and A. Pyatkin. On semi-transitive orientability of triangle-free graphs, arXiv:2003.06204v1. # S. Kitaev and A. Saito. On semi-transitive orientability of Kneser graphs and their complements, Discrete Math., to appear. # arxiv:1102.3980, S. Kitaev, P. Salimov, C. Severs, and H. Úlfarsson (2011) On the representability of line graphs. In: G. Mauri, A. Leporati (eds), Developments in Language Theory. DLT 2011. Lecture Notes Comp. Sci. 6795, Springer, 478−479.
S. Kitaev and S. Seif. Word problem of the Perkins semigroup via directed acyclic graphs, Order 25 (2008), 177−194.

E. Leloup. Graphes représentables par mot. Master Thesis, University of Liège, 2019

Mandelshtam. On graphs representable by pattern-avoiding words, Discussiones Mathematicae Graph Theory 39 (2019) 375−389.

С. В. Китаев, А. В. Пяткин. Графы, представимые в виде слов. Обзор результатов, Дискретн. анализ и исслед. опер., 2018, том 25,номер 2, 19−53.


Software

Software to study word-representable graphs can be found here:

# ttps://www.win.tue.nl/~hzantema/reprnr.html H. Zantema. Software REPRNR to compute the representation number of a graph, 2018. Available at https://www.win.tue.nl/~hzantema/reprnr.html.


References

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