Title of article :
Sorting a bridge hand Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
Henrik Eriksson، نويسنده , , Kimmo Eriksson، نويسنده , , Johan Karlander، نويسنده , , Lars Svensson، نويسنده , , Johan W?stlund، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages :
12
From page :
289
To page :
300
Abstract :
Sorting a permutation by block moves is a task that every bridge player has to solve every time she picks up a new hand of cards. It is also a problem for the computational biologist, for block moves are a fundamental type of mutation that can explain why genes common to two species do not occur in the same order in the chromosome. It is not known whether there exists an optimal sorting procedure running in polynomial time. Bafna and Pevzner gave a polynomial time algorithm that sorts any permutation of length n in at most 3n/4 moves. Our new algorithm improves this to ⌊(2n−2)/3⌋ for n⩾9. For the reverse permutation, we give an exact expression for the number of moves needed, namely ⌈(n+1)/2⌉. Computations of Bafna and Pevzner up to n=10 seemed to suggest that this is the worst case; but as it turns out, a first counterexample occurs for n=13, i.e. the bridge playerʹs case. Professional card players never sort by rank, only by suit. For this case, we give a complete answer to the optimal sorting problem.
Keywords :
Sorting by transpositions , Sorting a bridge hand , Cayley graph , Toric permutation
Journal title :
Discrete Mathematics
Serial Year :
2001
Journal title :
Discrete Mathematics
Record number :
949843
Link To Document :
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