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{{Short description|Mapping of a graph into a tree}}
{{about|tree structure of graphs|decomposition of graphs into trees|
[[
In [[graph theory]], a '''tree decomposition''' is a mapping of a [[
The concept of tree
==Definition==
Intuitively, a tree decomposition represents the vertices of a given graph {{mvar|G}} as subtrees of a tree, in such a way that vertices in
Each subtree associates a graph vertex with a set of tree nodes. To define this formally, we represent each tree node as the set of vertices associated with it.
Thus, given a graph {{math|1=''G'' = (''V'', ''E'')}}, a tree decomposition is a pair {{math|(''X'', ''T'')}}, where {{math|1=''X'' = {''X''
# The union of all sets
# For every edge {{math|(''v'', ''w'')}} in the graph, there is a subset
# If
The tree decomposition of a graph is far from unique; for example, a trivial tree decomposition contains all vertices of the graph in its single root node.
A tree decomposition in which the underlying tree is a [[path graph]] is called a path decomposition, and the width parameter derived from these special types of tree decompositions is known as [[pathwidth]].
A tree decomposition {{math|1=(''X'', ''T'' = (''I'', ''F''))}} of treewidth {{mvar|k}} is ''smooth'', if for all <math>i \in I : |X_i| = k + 1</math>, and for all <math>(i, j) \in F : |X_i \cap X_j| = k</math>.<ref name="b96">{{harvtxt|Bodlaender|1996}}.</ref>
==Treewidth==
{{main|Treewidth}}
The ''width'' of a tree decomposition is the size of its largest set ''X''<sub>''i''</sub> minus one. The [[treewidth]] tw(''G'') of a graph ''G'' is the minimum width among all possible tree decompositions of ''G''. In this definition, the size of the largest set is diminished by one in order to make the treewidth of a tree equal to one.▼
[[File:Treedecompsnocolour.JPG|thumb|upright=1.5|Two different tree-decompositions of the same graph]]
▲The ''width'' of a tree decomposition is the size of its largest set
It is NP-complete to determine whether a given graph
However, when
==Dynamic programming==
At the beginning of the 1970s, it was observed that a large class of combinatorial optimization problems defined on graphs could be efficiently solved by non
As an example, consider the problem of finding the [[maximum independent set]] in a graph of treewidth
:<math>A(S,i)=|S| + \sum_{j} \left(B(S\cap X_j, j,i) - |S\cap X_j|\right)</math>
:<math>B(S,i,j)=\max_{S'\subset X_i\atop S=S'\cap X_j} A(S',i)</math>
where the sum in the calculation of <math>A(S,i)</math> is over the children of node
At each node or edge, there are at most {{math|2
This dynamic programming approach is used in [[machine learning]] via the [[junction tree algorithm]] for [[belief propagation]] in graphs of bounded treewidth. It also plays a key role in algorithms for computing the treewidth and constructing tree decompositions: typically, such algorithms have a first step that [[approximation algorithm|approximates]] the treewidth, constructing a tree decomposition with this approximate width, and then a second step that performs dynamic programming in the approximate tree decomposition to compute the exact value of the treewidth.<ref name="b96"/>
==See also==
*[[Bramble (graph theory)|Brambles]] and [[Haven (graph theory)|havens]]
*[[Branch-decomposition]]
*[[Decomposition method (constraint satisfaction)|Decomposition Method]]{{snd}}Tree Decomposition is used in Decomposition Method for solving constraint satisfaction problem.
==Notes==
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| title = Linear time algorithms for NP-hard problems restricted to partial ''k''-trees
| journal = Discrete Applied Mathematics
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| journal = Journal of Algorithms
| volume = 8 | issue = 2 | year = 1987 | pages = 216–235 | doi = 10.1016/0196-6774(87)90039-3}}.
*{{citation
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| title = Nonserial Dynamic Programming
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| isbn = 0-12-093450-7}}.
*{{citation
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| series = Lecture Notes in Computer Science
| volume = 317 | year = 1988 | pages = 105–118
| doi = 10.1007/3-540-19488-6_110| hdl = 1874/16258 | isbn = 978-3-540-19488-0 | hdl-access = free}}.
*{{citation
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| title = A linear time algorithm for finding tree-decompositions of small treewidth
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*{{Citation
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| url=http://www.math.uni-hamburg.de/home/diestel/books/graph.theory/
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*{{citation
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| doi = 10.1145/2220357.2220363
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| title = Size and treewidth bounds for conjunctive queries
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*{{Citation
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| title = Graph minors III: Planar tree-width
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{{refend}}
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[[Category:Graph minor theory]]
[[Category:Graph theory objects]]
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