Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q4902585> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 23 of
23
with 100 triples per page.
- Q4902585 subject Q7217193.
- Q4902585 subject Q8612141.
- Q4902585 abstract "In mathematics, a biased graph is a graph with a list of distinguished circles (edge sets of simple cycles), such that if two circles in the list are contained in a theta graph, then so is the third circle of the theta graph. A biased graph is a generalization of the combinatorial essentials of a gain graph and in particular of a signed graph.Formally, a biased graph Ω is a pair (G, B) where B is a linear class of circles; this by definition is a class of circles that satisfies the theta-graph property mentioned above.A subgraph or edge set whose circles are all in B (and which contains no half-edges is called balanced. For instance, a circle belonging to B is balanced and one that does not belong to B is unbalanced.Biased graphs are interesting mostly because of their matroids, but also because of their connection with multiary quasigroups. See below.".
- Q4902585 wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Q4902585 wikiPageWikiLink Q11246292.
- Q4902585 wikiPageWikiLink Q1147242.
- Q4902585 wikiPageWikiLink Q131476.
- Q4902585 wikiPageWikiLink Q141488.
- Q4902585 wikiPageWikiLink Q1503423.
- Q4902585 wikiPageWikiLink Q166507.
- Q4902585 wikiPageWikiLink Q245595.
- Q4902585 wikiPageWikiLink Q395.
- Q4902585 wikiPageWikiLink Q4903641.
- Q4902585 wikiPageWikiLink Q5302749.
- Q4902585 wikiPageWikiLink Q5517214.
- Q4902585 wikiPageWikiLink Q7217193.
- Q4902585 wikiPageWikiLink Q854818.
- Q4902585 wikiPageWikiLink Q8612141.
- Q4902585 wikiPageWikiLink Q898572.
- Q4902585 wikiPageWikiLink Q905837.
- Q4902585 wikiPageWikiLink Q949972.
- Q4902585 comment "In mathematics, a biased graph is a graph with a list of distinguished circles (edge sets of simple cycles), such that if two circles in the list are contained in a theta graph, then so is the third circle of the theta graph.".
- Q4902585 label "Biased graph".