English

Avoiding vincular patterns on alternating words

Combinatorics 2016-03-02 v2

Abstract

A word w=w1w2wnw=w_1w_2\cdots w_n is alternating if either w1<w2>w3<w4>w_1<w_2>w_3<w_4>\cdots (when the word is up-down) or w1>w2<w3>w4<w_1>w_2<w_3>w_4<\cdots (when the word is down-up). The study of alternating words avoiding classical permutation patterns was initiated by the authors in~\cite{GKZ}, where, in particular, it was shown that 123-avoiding up-down words of even length are counted by the Narayana numbers. However, not much was understood on the structure of 123-avoiding up-down words. In this paper, we fill in this gap by introducing the notion of a cut-pair that allows us to subdivide the set of words in question into equivalence classes. We provide a combinatorial argument to show that the number of equivalence classes is given by the Catalan numbers, which induces an alternative (combinatorial) proof of the corresponding result in~\cite{GKZ}. Further, we extend the enumerative results in~\cite{GKZ} to the case of alternating words avoiding a vincular pattern of length 3. We show that it is sufficient to enumerate up-down words of even length avoiding the consecutive pattern 132\underline{132} and up-down words of odd length avoiding the consecutive pattern 312\underline{312} to answer all of our enumerative questions. The former of the two key cases is enumerated by the Stirling numbers of the second kind.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1507.06154,
  title  = {Avoiding vincular patterns on alternating words},
  author = {Alice L. L. Gao and Sergey Kitaev and Philip B. Zhang},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1507.06154},
  year   = {2016}
}

Comments

25 pages; To appear in Discrete Mathematics

R2 v1 2026-06-22T10:16:23.757Z