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This book constitutes the thoroughly refereed post-conference proceedings of the 40th International Workshop on Graph-Theoretic Concepts in Computer Science, WG 2014, held in Nouan-le-Fuzelier, France, in June 2014. The 32 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from 80 submissions. The book also includes two invited papers. The papers cover a wide range of topics in graph theory related to computer science, such as design and analysis of sequential, parallel, randomized, parameterized and distributed graph and network algorithms; structural graph theory with algorithmic or complexity applications; computational complexity of graph and network problems; graph grammars, graph rewriting systems and graph modeling; graph drawing and layouts; computational geometry; random graphs and models of the web and scale-free networks; and support of these concepts by suitable implementations and applications.
This book constitutes the thoroughly refereed post-proceedings of the 33rd International Workshop on Graph-Theoretic Concepts in Computer Science, WG 2007, held in Dornburg, Germany, in June 2007. The 30 revised full papers presented together with 1 invited paper were carefully selected from 99 submissions. The papers feature original results on all aspects of graph-theoretic concepts in Computer Science, e.g. structural graph theory, sequential, parallel, and distributed graph and network algorithms and their complexity, graph grammars and graph rewriting systems, graph-based modeling, graph-drawing and layout, diagram methods, and support of these concepts by suitable implementations.
The 31st International Workshop on Graph-Theoretic Concepts in Computer Science (WG 2005) was held on the campus "Ile du Saulcy" of the Univ- sity Paul Verlaine-Metz in France. The workshop was organized by the La- ratoire d'Informatique Th eorique et Appliqu ee (LITA) and it took place June 23 - 25 2005. The 94 participants of WG 2005 came from universities and - search institutes of 18 di?erent countries. The WG 2005 workshop continues the series of 30 previous WG workshops. Since 1975, WG has taken place 20 times in Germany, four times in The Neth- lands, twotimesinAustriaaswellasonceinItaly, inSlovakia, inSwitzerlandand inCzechRepublic, andhas nowbeen heldfor the ?rsttime inFrance.The wo- shop aims at uniting theory and practice by demonstrating how graph-theoretic concepts can be applied to various areas in computer science, or by extracting new problems from applications. The goal is to present recent research results and to identify and explore directions of future research. The talks were given in the "Petit Th eatre." They showed how recent research results from algori- mic graph theory can be used in computer science and which graph-theoretic questions arise from new developments in computer science. There were two fascinating invited lectures by Georg Gottlob (Vienna, Austria) and Gregory Kucherov (Nancy, France)."
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