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On the Consistency of Precedence Matrices
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Source Journal of the ACM (JACM) archive
Volume 7 ,  Issue 3  (July 1960) table of contents
Pages: 255 - 259  
Year of Publication: 1960
ISSN:0004-5411
Author
Frank Harary  University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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ABSTRACT

The consistency of precedence matrices is studied in the very natural geometric setting of the theory of directed graphs. An elegant recent procedure (Marimont [7]) for checking consistency is further justified by means of a graphical lemma. In addition, the “direction of future work” mentioned in [7] (to which the present communication may be regarded as a sequel) is developed here using graph theoretic methods. This is based on the relationship between the occurrence of directed cycles and the recognition of “strongly connected components” in a directed graph. An algorithm is included for finding these components in any directed graph. This is necessarily more complicated than determining whether there do not exist any directed cycles, i.e., whether or not a given precedence matrix is consistent.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
1
E. W. BARANKIN, Precedence matrices. University of California Management Sciences Research Project, Research Report No. 26, December, 1953.
 
2
F. HA~nY, A graph theoretic method for the complete reduction of a matrix with a view toward finding its eigenvalues. J. Math. Phys. 88 (1959), 104--111.
 
3
F. HAP~Rr, Graph theoretic methods in the management sciences. Management Science 5 (1959), 387-403.
 
4
F. HARARY, The number of functional digraphs. Math. Ann. 188 (1959), 203-211.
 
5
F. HARAnV AND Z. NORMAN, Graph theory as a mathematical model in social science. Ann Arbor, Institute for Social Research, 1953.
 
6
D. FK~NIO, Theorie der endlichen und uncndl~chen Graphen. Leipzig, 1936; reprinted New York, 1950.
7
 
8
I. C. Ross ANY F. HARARY, A description of strengthening and weakening members of a group. Sociometry 22 (1959), 139-147.