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CCC 2013 . The length of vertex pursuit games. Anthony Bonato Ryerson University. Cops and Robbers. C. C. C. Cops and Robbers. C. R. C. C. Cops and Robbers. C. R. C. C. Cops and Robbers. C. R. C. C. Cops and Robbers. C. R. C. C. Cops and Robbers. C. R. C. C.
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CCC 2013 The length of vertex pursuit games Anthony Bonato Ryerson University
Cops and Robbers C C C Vertex pursuit
Cops and Robbers C R C C Vertex pursuit
Cops and Robbers C R C C Vertex pursuit
Cops and Robbers C R C C Vertex pursuit
Cops and Robbers C R C C Vertex pursuit
Cops and Robbers C R C C Vertex pursuit
Cops and Robbers C R C C R loses Vertex pursuit
Cops and Robbers • played on reflexive undirected graphs G • two players Cops C and robber R play at alternate time-steps (cops first) with perfect information • players move to vertices along edges; allowed to moved to neighbors or pass • cops try to capture (i.e. land on) the robber, while robber tries to evade capture • minimum number of cops needed to capture the robber is the cop number c(G) • well-defined as c(G) ≤ |V(G)| Vertex pursuit
Bounds cop number • c(G) ≤ γ(G) (the domination number of G) • far from sharp: paths • Meyniel’s conjecture: if G is connected, then c(G) = O(|V(G)|1/2) • best known upper bound: (Lu,Peng,13+), (Scott, Sudakov,11), and (Frieze, Krivelevich, Loh, 11) Vertex pursuit
R.J. Nowakowski, P. Winkler Vertex-to-vertex pursuit in a graph, Discrete Mathematics43 (1983) 235-239. • 5 pages • > 200 citations (most for either author) Vertex pursuit
The NW relation • (Nowakowski,Winkler,83) introduced a sequence of relations characterizing cop-win graphs • u ≤0 v if u = v • u ≤i v if for all x in N[u], there is a y in N[v] such that x ≤j y for some j < i. Vertex pursuit
Characterization • the relations are ≤imonotone increasing; thus, there is an integer k such that ≤k = ≤k+1 • write: ≤k = ≤ Theorem (Nowakowski, Winkler, 83) A cop has a winning strategy iff ≤ is V(G) x V(G). Vertex pursuit
k cops • may define an analogous relation but in V(G) x V(Gk) (categorical product) • (Clarke,MacGillivray,12) k cops have a winning strategy iff the relation ≤ is V(G) x V(Gk). Vertex pursuit
Axioms for pursuit games (B, MacGillivray,13+) • a pursuit game G is a discrete-time process satisfying the following: • Two players, Left Land Right R. • Perfect-information. • There is a set of allowed positions PL for L; similarly for Right. • For each state of the game and each player, there is a non-empty set of allowed moves. Each allowed move leaves the position of the other player unchanged. • There is a set of allowed start positions I a subset of PL x PR. • The game begins with L choosing some position pL and R choosing qR such that (pL, qR) is in I. • After each side has chosen its initial position, the sides move alternately with L moving first. Each side, on its turn, must choose an allowed move from its current position. • There is a subset of final positions, F. Left wins if at any time, the current position belongs to F. Right wins the current position never belongs to F. Vertex pursuit
Examples of pursuit games • Cops and Robbers • play on graphs, digraphs, orders, hypergraphs, etc. • play at different speeds, or on different edge sets • Cops and Robbers with traps • Distance k Cops and Robbers • Tandem-win Cops and Robbers • Helicopter Cops and Robbers • Maker-Breaker Games • Seepage • Scared Robber Vertex pursuit
Relational characterization • given a pursuit game G, we may define relations on PL x PR as follows: • pL≤0 qR if (pL, qR) in F. • pL≤i qRif Right is on qR and for every xR in PR such that if Right has an allowed move from (pL, qR) to (pL, xR), there exists yL in PL such that xR≤j yL for some j < i and Left has an allowed move from (pL, xR) to (yL, xR). • define ≤ analogously as before Vertex pursuit
Characterization Theorem (BM,13+) Left has a winning strategy in the pursuit game G if and only if there exists pL in PL, which is the first component of an ordered pair in I, such that for all qR in PR with (pL, qR) in I there exists wL in the set of allowed moves for Left from pL such that qR≤wL. • gives rise to a min/max expression for the length of the game Vertex pursuit
Length of game • for an allowed start position (pL, qR), define Corollary (BM,13+) If Left has a winning strategy in the a pursuit game G, then assuming optimal play, the length of the game is where IL is the set positions for Left which are the first component of an ordered pair in I. Vertex pursuit
Aside: position independence • in case of position independence (eg Cops and Robbers, but not Helicopter Cops and Robbers), there is a characterization even more analogous with that of NW and CM • gives complexity bound on determining whether L has a winning strategy • in the case of Cops and Robbers with k cops gives O(n2k+2) time algorithm, which matches the best known complexity (CM,12) Vertex pursuit
Capture time of a graph • the length of Cops and Robbers was considered first as capture time • (B,Hahn,Golovach,Kratochvíl,09) capture time of G: length of game with c(G) cops assuming optimal play, written capt(G) • if G is cop-win, then capt(G) ≤ n-4 if n ≥ 7 • capt(G) ≤ n/2 for many families of cop-win graphs including chordal graphs • examples of planar graphs with capt(G) = n-4 Vertex pursuit
Cop number > 1 • not much is know about capt(G) if c(G) > 1 • hypercubes? ... Vertex pursuit
Cop number of hypercubes • (Maamoun,Meyniel,87): the cop number of the Cartesian product of n trees is floor(n+1 / 2) • no reference to the length of the game; i.e capture time of the hypercube • problem: determine capt(Qn) Vertex pursuit
Capture time of grids • (Merhabian,10): the capture time of the Cartesian product of two trees T1and T2 is floor((diam(T1) + diam(T2)) / 2) • in particular, the capture time of the m x n Cartesian grid is floor((m + n)/2)-1 Vertex pursuit
Capture time of hypercubes (B, Gordinowicz, Kinnersley, Pralat,13+) The capture time of Qn is Θ(nlog n). • proof finds lower and upper bounds • focus on lower bound Vertex pursuit
Lower bound • we prove something a little stronger than is needed Theorem (BGKP,13+) For d > 0 a constant, a robber can escape nd cops for at least (1-o(1))1/2 n log n rounds. • probabilistic method: play with a random robber Vertex pursuit
Useful lemma Lemma (BGKP,13+) • lemma shows that, against a random robber, a cop should keep the distance between the players even and, subject to that, minimize the distance (ie play greedily) Vertex pursuit
Coupon collector problem • n coupons, all equally likely, drawn with replacement • how many do you need to draw before you have collected all n of them? • answer: (1+o(1))n log n Vertex pursuit
Deviation bound • we use the following generalization of a result of (Doerr, 2011) to bound the probability that the actual capturing time is significantly less than its expectation Theorem (BGKP,13+) Vertex pursuit
Proof of lower bound (sketch) • let T= 1/2(n-1)log n, ε = ln((4d+1) ln n) / ln n = o(1). • show that a random robber can play (1-ε)Trounds without being captured • can play initial round due to expansion • next consider a single cop C playing greedily as in lemma • can show process of C capturing R is equivalent to the coupon collector problem • using useful lemma and deviation bound, the probability single cop captures robber is exp(-(n/2)ε/4); via union bound for all nd cops this is o(1) • hence, there is SOME deterministic strategy for the robber to survive (1-ε)T rounds Vertex pursuit
Problems and directions • Conjecture: capt(Qn) = (1+o(1))1/2 n log n • capture time for other graph families? • Program: study capt(G) if number of cops varies • for example, define captk(G), and consider c(G) ≤ k ≤ γ(G) Vertex pursuit
CGT (Berlekamp, Conway, Guy, 82) A combinatorial game satisfies: • There are two players, Left and Right. • There is perfect information. • There is a set of allowed positions in the game. • The rules of the game specify how the game begins and, for each player and each position, which moves to other positions are allowed. • The players alternate moves. • The game ends when a position is reached where no moves are possible for the player whose turn it is to move. In normal play the last player to move wins. Vertex pursuit
Example: NIM Vertex pursuit
Pursuit → CGT Theorem (BM,13+) • Every pursuit game is a combinatorial game. • Not every combinatorial game is a pursuit game. • uses characterization of (Smith, 66) via game digraphs • Nim is a counter-example for item (2) Vertex pursuit