Schedule
- Program Booklet (다운로드)
Monday, August 18, 2025
Time | Speaker | Title / Event |
---|---|---|
13:30-13:50 | Registration | |
13:50-14:00 | Welcome remarks | |
14:00-15:30 CHAIR: Sang-il Oum 엄상일 (IBS) | ||
14:00-15:00 |
Eun Jung Kim 김은정 KAIST & IBS DIMAG & CNRS |
Algorithm and MSO logic on graphs with tree-like structure
[IS]
A finite-state automaton is a computing machine ("algorithm") of primitive form, which scans a given string over a finite alphabet, e.g. a string consisting of 0's and 1's, and decides if the given string is in some language. It is primitive in the sense that the machine does not have a memory, and the machine keeps track of the inner working of the algorithm by having a "state", out of a finite number of possible states, which is updated according to a hard-wired rule as the machine reads the symbols on the input string one by one. A set of strings ("language") recognized by a finite automaton is known as a regular language. It is well-known that a regular language is precisely described by a homomorphism from the set of all strings to a finite semigroup. A less known but nonetheless important is that a language is regular if and only it is defined by so called Monadic Second Order Logic (Büchi-Elgot-Trakhtenbrot 1960), MSO logic in short. As a consequence, a language that can be defined using MSO logic admits an efficient algorithm for membership test, marking a regular language precisely as a language in which logical, algebraic and algorithmic behavior squarely meet. And these nice characterizations generalize to labelled trees, which extends the path-like shape inherent in strings (Thatcher and Wright, 1968). Courcelle's theorem (Courcelle 1990, Courcelle-Makowski-Rotices 2000) radically broadened the applications of Büchi-Elgot-Trakhtenbrot theorem on the equivalence of "recognizability and definability" on strings. Many fundamental graph problems can be expressed using MSO logic. And many such problems can be efficiently solved via so-called dynamic programming algorithms when the input graph is tree-like, e.g. has constant treewidth or constant cliquewidth. Courcelle's theorem revealed that the availability of dynamic programming algorithms for those problems is not a coincidence by showing that any MSO-definable graph problem has a nice algebraic property. This in turn leads to a meta-algorithm, which is a finite-state (tree) automaton in essence. Whether the opposite implication holds on graph with tree-like structures, thus allowing a nice characterization akin to those on strings and labelled trees, was asked by Courcelle himself (1990). The converse statement of Courcelle's theorem turns out to hold. It is proved by Bojańczyk and Pilipczuk (2016) that if such a nice algebraic property holds for a graph property, the property admits a logical description by MSO logic on graphs of bounded treewidth. As Courcelle's theorem holds on graphs of bounded cliquewidth as well as on matroids of bounded branchwidth when representable over a finite field, it is conjectured that "recognizability equals definability" on these more general structures. In this talk, we overview how algorithms design is intrinsically intertwined with algebraic and logical aspects of problems on graphs with tree-like structure. We also give a brief overview on essential, powerful tools for tackling these conjectures. |
15:00-15:30 |
Yongho Shin 신용호 University of Wrocław |
Learning-augmented online bipartite fractional matching
[CT]
Authors: Davin Choo, Billy Jin, Yongho Shin |
15:30-16:00 | Coffee Break | |
16:00-18:00 CHAIR: Hyobeen Kim 김효빈 (Chonnam National University) | ||
16:00-16:30 |
Dabeen Lee 이다빈 KAIST |
Combinatorial optimization through the lens of boolean polynomials and binary matroids
[CT]
Authors: Ahmad Abdi, Dabeen Lee |
16:30-17:00 |
Seonghyuk Im 임성혁 KAIST & IBS ECOPRO |
Random perturbation of dense graphs
[CT]
Authors: Jie Han, Seonghyuk Im, Bin Wang, Junxue Zhang |
17:00-17:30 |
Hyunwoo Lee 이현우 KAIST & IBS ECOPRO |
On a Ramsey-Turán variant of Roth's theorem
[CT]
Authors: Matija Bucić, Micha Christoph, Jaehoon Kim, Hyunwoo Lee, Varun Sivashankar |
17:30-18:00 |
Ingyu Baek 백인규 Yonsei University |
Counting loose odd cycles in dense hypergraphs
[CT]
Authors: Ingyu Baek, Joonkyung Lee |
19:00-21:00 | Dinner (고반식당 대전엑스포점) |
Tuesday, August 19, 2025
Time | Speaker | Title / Event |
---|---|---|
09:30-10:30 CHAIR: Seunghyun Seo 서승현 (Kangwon National University) | ||
09:30-10:30 |
Dongsu Kim 김동수 KAIST |
Combinatorics of orthogonal polynomials in the q-Askey scheme
[IS]
Combinatorics of orthogonal polynomials has been studied from 1980's. There are various combinatorial interpretations for important orthogonal polynomials and their properties. Orthogonal polynomials in q-Askey scheme have q-factorials in their terms and coefficients. A nice combinatorial model to handle q-factorials has been introduced in Lecture hall graphs and the Askey scheme, by S. Corteel, B. Jonnadula, J. Keating, J. S. Kim, arXiv:2311.12761v2. This talk is a history of the combinatorics of orthogonal polynomials up to the above paper. |
10:30-11:00 | Coffee Break | |
11:00-12:00 CHAIR: Joonkyung Lee 이준경 (Yonsei University) | ||
11:00-11:30 |
Heesung Shin 신희성 Inha University |
Combinatorial Bijections in Permutations, Trees, and Paths
[CT]
This presentation traces my two-decade journey exploring combinatorial bijections in enumerative combinatorics. My research establishes strong connections and provides combinatorial interpretations for algebraic identities between permutations, trees (rooted, ordered, labeled, p-ary), and lattice paths (Dyck, Schröder, Delannoy, F-paths). Key contributions include bijections for pattern-avoiding inversion sequences and permutations, refined enumerations of trees based on various properties like indegree sequences and maximal decreasing subtrees, and analysis of lattice paths with avoidance conditions. The work also covers bijections for parking functions and involutions on partitions for hook length symmetry. This talk emphasizes the power of bijections in solving problems and revealing new connections in combinatorial theory. |
11:30-12:00 |
Younghan Yoon 윤영한 Ajou University |
On the graph a-numbers
[CT]
Authors: Suyoung Choi, Younghan Yoon |
12:00-13:30 | Lunch Break | |
13:30-15:30 CHAIR: Hayan Nam 남하얀 (Konkuk University) | ||
13:30-14:30 |
Ae Ja Yee 이애자 Pennsylvania State University |
Partition statistics and the Littlewood decomposition
[IS]
(in honor of Professor Dongsu Kim's retirement) |
14:30-15:00 |
Inseo Kim 김인서 Chungbuk National University |
On toric Schubert varieties in flag varieties
[CT]
Authors: Inseo Kim, Eunjeong Lee |
15:00-15:30 |
Seonkyung Kim 김선경 Kangwon National University |
The largest size of an (s,s+2)-core partition with even or odd parts only
[CT]
Authors: Hyoeun Cho, Seong hyeon Hwan, Seonkyung Kim, Hayan Nam |
15:30-16:00 | Coffee Break | |
16:00-18:00 CHAIR: Sangwook Kim 김상욱 (Chonnam National University) | ||
16:00-17:00 |
Zhicong Lin Shandong University |
Tree structures and combinatorics of bi-γ positivity
[IS]
Multiset Eulerian polynomials and 1/k-Eulerian polynomials are different generalizations of the classical Eulerian polynomials. I will talk about combinatorics of their bi-γ-positivity via tree structures. |
17:00-17:30 |
Seunghun Lee 이승훈 IBS DIMAG |
On the extension problem on the moment curve
[CT]
Authors: Seunghun Lee, Eran Nevo |
17:30-18:00 |
Seonghyeon Yu 유성현 Ajou University |
Bier spheres and their full subcomplexes
[CT]
Authors: Suyoung Choi, Younghan Yoon, Seonghyeon Yu |
18:00- | Conference Banquet at IBS |
Wednesday, August 20, 2025
Time | Speaker | Title / Event |
---|---|---|
09:30-10:30 CHAIR: Young Soo Kwon 권영수 (Yeungnam University) | ||
09:30-10:30 |
O-joung Kwon 권오정 Hanyang University & IBS DIMAG |
On problems related to digraph width parameters
[IS]
Treewidth is a well-known graph parameter that plays an important role in Robertson and Seymour's graph minors project. Several width parameters inspired by treewidth have been introduced for digraphs, including directed treewidth, directed pathwidth, DAG-width, Kelly-width, cycle rank, DAG-depth, and so on. Compared to undirected width parameters, finding unavoidable structures for digraph width parameters turns out to be very difficult. Recently, we provided a collection of three obstruction families for cycle rank in terms of butterfly minors. In this talk, we present this result and related open problems. This is joint work with Meike Hatzel, Myounghwan Lee, and Sebastian Wiederrecht. |
10:30-11:00 | Coffee Break | |
11:00-12:30 CHAIR: Jongyook Park 박종육 (Kyungpook National University) | ||
11:00-11:30 |
Myounghwan Lee 이명환 Hanyang University |
Unavoidable butterfly minors in digraphs of large cycle rank
[CT]
Authors: Meike Hatzel, O-joung Kwon, Myounghwan Lee, Sebastian Wiederrecht |
11:30-12:00 |
Seokbeom Kim 김석범 KAIST & IBS DIMAG |
Subtournaments of tournaments of large clique-width
[CT]
Authors: Seokbeom Kim, Taite LaGrange, Mathieu Rundström, Sophie Spirkl |
12:00-12:30 |
Seog-Jin Kim 김석진 Konkuk University |
The square of every subcubic planar graph without 4-cycles and 5-cycles is 7-choosable
[CT]
Authors: Ligang Jin, Yingli Kang, Seog-Jin Kim |
12:30-13:30 | Pizza Lunch |