Abstract

We developed a procedure of reducing the number of vertices and edges of a given tree, which we call the “tree simplification procedure,” without changing its topological information. Our motivation for developing this procedure was to reduce computational costs of graph Laplacian eigenvalues of such trees. When we applied this procedure to a set of trees representing dendritic structures of retinal ganglion cells of a mouse and computed their graph Laplacian eigenvalues, we observed two “plateaux” (i.e., two sets of multiple eigenvalues) in the eigenvalue distribution of each such simplified tree. In this article, after describing our tree simplification procedure, we analyze why such eigenvalue plateaux occur in a simplified tree; explain such plateaux can occur in a more general graph if it satisfies a certain condition; and identify these two eigenvalues specifically as well as the lower bound to their multiplicity.

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