arXiv:1612.04702 [math.CO]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources
Online Sum-Paintability: Slow-Coloring of Trees
Gregory J. Puleo, Douglas B. West
Published 2016-12-14Version 1
The slow-coloring game is played by Lister and Painter on a graph $G$. On each round, Lister marks a nonempty subset $M$ of the remaining vertices, scoring $|M|$ points. Painter then gives a color to a subset of $M$ that is independent in $G$. The game ends when all vertices are colored. Painter's goal is to minimize the total score; Lister seeks to maximize it. The score that each player can guarantee doing no worse than is the sum-color cost of $G$, written $\mathring{\rm s}(G)$. We develop a linear-time algorithm to compute $\mathring{\rm s}(G)$ when $G$ is a tree, enabling us to characterize the $n$-vertex trees with the largest and smallest values.