Skew-merged permutationIn the theory of permutation patterns, a skew-merged permutation is a permutation that can be partitioned into an increasing sequence and a decreasing sequence. They were first studied by Stankova (1994) and given their name by Atkinson (1998). CharacterizationThe two smallest permutations that cannot be partitioned into an increasing and a decreasing sequence are 3412 and 2143. Stankova (1994) was the first to establish that a skew-merged permutation can also be equivalently defined as a permutation that avoids the two patterns 3412 and 2143. A permutation is skew-merged if and only if its associated permutation graph is a split graph, a graph that can be partitioned into a clique (corresponding to the descending subsequence) and an independent set (corresponding to the ascending subsequence). The two forbidden patterns for skew-merged permutations, 3412 and 2143, correspond to two of the three forbidden induced subgraphs for split graphs, a four-vertex cycle and a graph with two disjoint edges, respectively. The third forbidden induced subgraph, a five-vertex cycle, cannot exist in a permutation graph (see Kézdy, Snevily & Wang (1996)). EnumerationFor the number of skew-merged permutations of length is
Atkinson (1998) was the first to show that the generating function of these numbers is from which it follows that the number of skew-merged permutations of length is given by the formula and that these numbers obey the recurrence relation Another derivation of the generating function for skew-merged permutations was given by Albert & Vatter (2013). Computational complexityTesting whether one permutation is a pattern in another can be solved efficiently when the larger of the two permutations is skew-merged, as shown by Albert et al. (2016). References
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