Quasi-random graphs, subgraph counts and graph limits, again

Abstract

We study properties of graphs (or rather graph sequences) saying that some restricted count of subgraphs is approximatively what is expected in a random graph. It has been shown by several authors that many such properties characterize quasi-random graphs, but there are also some exceptions. We continue here the line of investigation in Janson and Sós (2013), and introduce some new versions of these properties, in order to better understand why many of these properties are quasi-random, and to understand the structure of the exceptions that are not. A new feature in the proofs is a simple decomposition of the subspace of symmetric functions in L2([0,1]m) into subspaces that are irreducible for the action of measure-preserving transformations of [0,1]; this simplifies some arguments and gives structure to others.

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