Abstract

There is a deep connection between permutations and trees. Certain sub-structures of permutations, called sub-permutations, bijectively map to sub-trees of binary increasing trees. This opens a powerful tool set to study enumerative and probabilistic properties of sub-permutations and to investigate the relationships between ‘local’ and ‘global’ features using the concept of pattern avoidance.First, given a pattern μ, we study how the avoidance of μ in a permutation π affects the presence of other patterns in the sub-permutations of π. More precisely, considering patterns of length 3, we solve instances of the following problem: given a class of permutations K and a pattern μ, we ask for the number of permutations π∈Avn(μ) whose sub-permutations in K satisfy certain additional constraints on their size.Second, we study the probability for a generic pattern to be contained in a random permutation π of size n without being present in the sub-permutations of π generated by the entry 1≤k≤n. These theoretical results can be useful to define efficient randomized pattern-search procedures based on classical algorithms of pattern-recognition, while the general problem of pattern-search is NP-complete.

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