|
Course Catalog 2012-2013
MAT-41196 Graph Theory, 6 cr |
Additional information
Suitable for postgraduate studies
Person responsible
Keijo Ruohonen
Lessons
Study type | P1 | P2 | P3 | P4 | Summer | Implementations | Lecture times and places |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Requirements
Closed-book written exam.
Completion parts must belong to the same implementation
Principles and baselines related to teaching and learning
-
Learning outcomes
After completing the course the student will identify graph and network structures in modeling. The student masters basic concepts, vocabulary, tools and properties of graphs and networks, and is able to use them in simple examples and modeling tasks. The student also masters basic graph-theoretical algorithms and is capable of implementing them in simple examples and applications. Completing the course gives the student skills for modelling and analyzing models using graph-theoretical methods. Nowadays these methods form perhaps the most general modelling tool in discrete mathematics and algorithmics, and therefore it is simply not possible to include outcomes for them all within a single course. Completing the course the student nevertheless should be able the generalize and extend the skills.
Content
Content | Core content | Complementary knowledge | Specialist knowledge |
1. | Basic concepts and properties of graphs and digraphs. Matrix representations of graphs and digraphs. Fundamental cut sets and fundamental circuits, their properties and matrix representations. | Applying the given basic concepts, properties and representations in analyzing graphs and digraphs. | |
2. | Trees and directed trees and their basic characterization results. Spanning trees and forests. Quasi-connected and acyclic digraphs. | Using trees and acyclic digraphs as a basic modeling tool. Stationary linear networks. | |
3. | Basic graph-theoretical algorithms and applying them in simple examples and applications. | The basic paradigms of graph algorithms and related algorithms with their variants: Dijkstra's algorithm, Floyd-Warshall algorithm, Kruskal's algorithm, search algorithms, annealing algorithms | |
4. | Geometric graph theory. Plane embedings of graphs and planar graphs and their basic concepts, properties and algorithms. Drawing graphs. Elements of matroid theory. | Applying the given basic concepts and properties in analyzing planar graphs | Matroids and greedy algorithms. |
Evaluation criteria for the course
Final grade is determined from tutorial activity and the final closed-book exam. Passing the course requires passing the final exam, and for this at most half of the maximum points are required. Bonus points obtained by tutorial activity may be used to add the exam points according to a given scheme. A thorough mastering of the core content should be sufficient for passing the course with grade 3. To get the degree 4 at least some complementary knowledge is usually required, getting the grade 5 then requires a more thorough mastering of this knowledge.
Assessment scale:
Numerical evaluation scale (1-5) will be used on the course
Partial passing:
Study material
Type | Name | Author | ISBN | URL | Edition, availability, ... | Examination material | Language |
Book | Graph Theory and Its Applications | Gross, J.L. & Yellen, J. | English | ||||
Other online content | Course page | English | |||||
Summary of lectures | Graph Theory | Ruohonen, K. | English |
Prerequisite relations (Requires logging in to POP)
Correspondence of content
Course | Corresponds course | Description |
|
|
More precise information per implementation
Implementation | Description | Methods of instruction | Implementation |
Graph Theory lectures and tutorials in Fall 2011. |