Graphs
and Polymorphisms
By
-
Prof.
Pavol Hell
School
of Computing Science, Simon Fraser University,
Canada
|
Date:
Dec 29, 2008 (Monday) |
Time:
2:30p.m - 3:30p.m |
Venue:
Rm. 121, Ho Sin Hang Engineering Building, CUHK |
Abstract
:
Polymorphisms
are of interest in algebra and logic, and they are
conjectured to be a universal tool for proving tractability
of constraint satisfaction problems. I will illustrate
their appeal and usefulness in graph theory, by giving
a guided tour of some new and some well known graph
classes defined by the existence of basic polymorphisms.
Biography
:
Professor
Hell obtained his PhD from Universite de Montreal
in 1973, and has been a full professor at Simon Fraser
University since 1983. His main research interests
are algorithmic graph theory and the complexity of
combinatorial problems. He has a monograph with Jarik
Nesetril on Graphs and Homomorphisms (published by
Oxford University Press) and has around 200 publications
in journals and conferences. He is currently the managing
editor of Journal of Graph Theory and also sits on
the editorial boards of SIAM Journal on Discrete Math,
Discrete Applied Mathematics, Order, and Contributions
to Discrete Mathematics. He was a recent Chair of
the Executive Board of the SIAM Activity Group on
Discrete Mathematics (2006-2008), member of NSERC
Grant Selection Committee 331 - Computing and Information
Sciences B (2005-08), and currently sits on the BIRS
Scientific Advisory Board (2008-2011), and the DIMATIA
(Prague) International Scientific Advisory Board (since
2002). |