Salvato in:
Dettagli Bibliografici
Autori principali: Bhattacharjee, Sutanay, Panse, Ameya, Sarma, Jayalal
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2026
Soggetti:
Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.19702
Tags: Aggiungi Tag
Nessun Tag, puoi essere il primo ad aggiungerne!!
_version_ 1866911698376458240
author Bhattacharjee, Sutanay
Panse, Ameya
Sarma, Jayalal
author_facet Bhattacharjee, Sutanay
Panse, Ameya
Sarma, Jayalal
contents Color refinement is an important technique that works very well in practice for the graph isomorphism problem. Tinhofer graphs are the class of graphs for which refinement together with individualization correctly tests graph isomorphism against every other graph, irrespective of the choices of vertices made during individualization. Motivated by the fact that Tinhofer graphs form a natural boundary for efficient graph isomorphism tests based on color refinement, in this paper, we introduce a hierarchy of graph classes within the class of Tinhofer graphs. We call a graph $G$ $k$-Tinhofer if, after $k$ rounds of individualization and refinement, the resulting colored graphs remain isomorphic for every graph $H \cong G$, irrespective of the choices of vertices made during individualization. Arvind et al. (2017) studied a hierarchy of graph classes motivated by color refinement - discrete, amenable, Tinhofer, and refinable graphs. We show that the $k$-Tinhofer hierarchy lies between the class of all graphs and Tinhofer graphs, with refinable graphs coinciding with the first level of the hierarchy. We obtain two characterizations of $k$-Tinhofer graphs: an algebraic characterization in terms of orbit partitions induced by pointwise stabilizers of automorphism groups, and a combinatorial characterization in terms of individualization-refinement trees and quotient graphs. For every fixed integer $k \ge 0$, there exist vertex-colored graphs that are $k$-Tinhofer but not $(k + 1)$-Tinhofer. For every fixed integer $k \ge 0$, the problem of deciding whether a given $k$-Tinhofer graph is ($k + 1$)-Tinhofer is $P$-hard under uniform $\mathsf{AC^0}$ many-one reductions. We show that testing isomorphism between an $(n - k)$-Tinhofer graph $G$ and an arbitrary graph $H$ is fixed-parameter tractable with respect to the parameter $k$.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2605_19702
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle A Hierarchy of Tinhofer Graphs: Separations and Membership Testing
Bhattacharjee, Sutanay
Panse, Ameya
Sarma, Jayalal
Computational Complexity
Color refinement is an important technique that works very well in practice for the graph isomorphism problem. Tinhofer graphs are the class of graphs for which refinement together with individualization correctly tests graph isomorphism against every other graph, irrespective of the choices of vertices made during individualization. Motivated by the fact that Tinhofer graphs form a natural boundary for efficient graph isomorphism tests based on color refinement, in this paper, we introduce a hierarchy of graph classes within the class of Tinhofer graphs. We call a graph $G$ $k$-Tinhofer if, after $k$ rounds of individualization and refinement, the resulting colored graphs remain isomorphic for every graph $H \cong G$, irrespective of the choices of vertices made during individualization. Arvind et al. (2017) studied a hierarchy of graph classes motivated by color refinement - discrete, amenable, Tinhofer, and refinable graphs. We show that the $k$-Tinhofer hierarchy lies between the class of all graphs and Tinhofer graphs, with refinable graphs coinciding with the first level of the hierarchy. We obtain two characterizations of $k$-Tinhofer graphs: an algebraic characterization in terms of orbit partitions induced by pointwise stabilizers of automorphism groups, and a combinatorial characterization in terms of individualization-refinement trees and quotient graphs. For every fixed integer $k \ge 0$, there exist vertex-colored graphs that are $k$-Tinhofer but not $(k + 1)$-Tinhofer. For every fixed integer $k \ge 0$, the problem of deciding whether a given $k$-Tinhofer graph is ($k + 1$)-Tinhofer is $P$-hard under uniform $\mathsf{AC^0}$ many-one reductions. We show that testing isomorphism between an $(n - k)$-Tinhofer graph $G$ and an arbitrary graph $H$ is fixed-parameter tractable with respect to the parameter $k$.
title A Hierarchy of Tinhofer Graphs: Separations and Membership Testing
topic Computational Complexity
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.19702