Permutations Avoiding Certain Partially-ordered Patterns
In this talk, I will introduce the concept of POPs and basic concepts regarding avoidance sets, simple permutations and inflation of permutations. I will also demonstrate how to construct explicit bijections from the avoidance sets of certain POPs to a variety of combinatorial objects, and hence address five open questions that were raised in Alice Gao and Sergey Kitaev, On Partially Ordered Patterns of Length 4 and 5 in Permutations, The Electronic Journal Of Combinatorics 26.3 (2019).
Write π=π1π2⋯πn to denote a permutation π on n letters where π(i)=πi for i∈{1,2,…,n}. A pattern is a permutation on a set of at least two elements.
A permutation π contains a pattern σ:=σ1σ2…σℓ if there is a subsequence π′=πi1πi2⋯πiℓ (where 1≤i1avoids\sigma$.
We say π avoids σ. For instance, the permutation 4132 contains the pattern 312 (as it has the subsequence 413), while the permutation 1324 avoids the pattern 312. The set of permutations that avoid a pattern or a set of patterns make up an avoidance set.
Enumerating the permutations of given lengths in the avoidance set of a pattern or set of patterns and finding one-to-one correspondences to well-known combinatorial objects is a topic of great interest.
I will explain how the notion of inflation of a permutation was used to successfully attack several such open enumeration questions.
The talk is based on a joint paper with D. Wehlau and I. Zaguia which will appear in Electronic Journal of Combinatorics. A preprint is available on arXiv.
The permutation software PermLab and the Online Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences (OEIS) were very helpful in this work.