TY - JOUR
T1 - A construction for the hat problem on a directed graph
AU - Hod, Rani
AU - Krzywkowski, Marcin
PY - 2012
Y1 - 2012
N2 - A team of n players plays the following game. After a strategy session, each player is randomly fitted with a blue or red hat. Then, without further communi-cation, everybody can try to guess simultaneously his own hat color by looking at the hat colors of the other players. Visibility is deńed by a directed graph; that is, vertices correspond to players, and a player can see each player to whom he is connected by an arc. The team wins if at least one player guesses his hat color correctly, and no one guesses his hat color wrong; otherwise the team loses. The team aims to maximize the probability of a win, and this maximum is called the hat number of the graph. Previous works focused on the hat problem on complete graphs and on undi-rected graphs. Some cases were solved, e.g., complete graphs of certain orders, trees, cycles, and bipartite graphs. These led Uriel Feige to conjecture that the hat number of any graph is equal to the hat number of its maximum clique. We show that the conjecture does not hold for directed graphs. Moreover, for every value of the maximum clique size, we provide a tight characterization of the range of possible values of the hat number. We construct families of directed graphs with a fixed clique number the hat number of which is asymptotically optimal. We also determine the hat number of tournaments to be one half.
AB - A team of n players plays the following game. After a strategy session, each player is randomly fitted with a blue or red hat. Then, without further communi-cation, everybody can try to guess simultaneously his own hat color by looking at the hat colors of the other players. Visibility is deńed by a directed graph; that is, vertices correspond to players, and a player can see each player to whom he is connected by an arc. The team wins if at least one player guesses his hat color correctly, and no one guesses his hat color wrong; otherwise the team loses. The team aims to maximize the probability of a win, and this maximum is called the hat number of the graph. Previous works focused on the hat problem on complete graphs and on undi-rected graphs. Some cases were solved, e.g., complete graphs of certain orders, trees, cycles, and bipartite graphs. These led Uriel Feige to conjecture that the hat number of any graph is equal to the hat number of its maximum clique. We show that the conjecture does not hold for directed graphs. Moreover, for every value of the maximum clique size, we provide a tight characterization of the range of possible values of the hat number. We construct families of directed graphs with a fixed clique number the hat number of which is asymptotically optimal. We also determine the hat number of tournaments to be one half.
KW - Clique number
KW - Digraph
KW - Directed graph
KW - Skeleton
KW - That problem
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84857024317&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.37236/1994
DO - 10.37236/1994
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AN - SCOPUS:84857024317
SN - 1077-8926
VL - 19
JO - Electronic Journal of Combinatorics
JF - Electronic Journal of Combinatorics
ER -