<p>"To sum up,this book gives a lucid, deep,and panoramic view of ofgraphtheory, both broadly conceived and concentrating on its algorithmic and combinatorial optimization aspects. It will be of immense use to anyone with an interest in the area, researcher, teacher, or student, as a reference work or as a resource for self-study. It is a weighty but attractive volume, rich in content and richly illustrated. I highly recommended it!"</p><p><strong><em>Frederic Green, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science Clark University Worcester.</em></strong></p>
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Editor-in-Chief
Krishnaiyan "KT" Thulasiraman is a professor and Hitachi Chair in Computer Science at the University of Oklahoma and a professor emeritus in electrical and computer engineering at Concordia University in Montreal. He is a fellow of the IEEE, AAAS, and the European Academy of Sciences. Dr. Thulasiraman has received several honors, including the Distinguished Alumnus Award of the Indian Institute of Technology Madras, IEEE Circuits and Systems Society Charles Desoer Technical Achievement Award, and IEEE Circuits and Systems Society Golden Jubilee Medal. He is the coauthor of two graduate-level textbooks on graphs, electrical networks, and algorithms. His research interests include graph theory, combinatorial optimization, and related algorithmic issues with a specific focus on applications in electrical and computer engineering and network science.
Editors
Subramanian Arumugam is a senior professor and director of the National Centre for Advanced Research in Discrete Mathematics at Kalasalingam University. He is also a visiting professor at Liverpool Hope University and an adjunct professor at Ball State University. Dr. Arumugam is the founding editor-in-chief of AKCE International Journal of Graphs and Combinatorics and author of 32 books and 195 journal papers. His current research interests include graph theory and its applications.
Andreas Brandstädt retired as a professor in computer science from the University of Rostock after 20 years. Dr. Brandstädt has published extensively in various international journals and conference proceedings. He is also the author of a textbook and coauthor of a widely cited monograph. His research interests include stochastics, complexity theory, formal languages, graph algorithms, graph theory, combinatorial optimization, and related algorithmic issues with a specific focus on efficient algorithms based on graph structure and graph classes with tree structure.
Takao Nishizeki is a professor emeritus at Tohoku University. He is a fellow of the ACM, IEEE, IEICE of Japan, Information Processing Society of Japan, and Bangladesh Academy of Sciences. Dr. Nishizeki has received several honors, including the Science and Technology Prize of the Japanese Ministry of Education, IEICE Achievement Award, ICF Best Research Award, Funai Information Science Promotion Award, TELECOM Technology Award, and many awards for best paper. His research interests include algorithms for planar graphs, edge coloring, network flows, VLSI routing, graph drawing, and cryptology.