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Author
Christensen, AlexHarris, Pamela E.
Jones, Zakiya
Loving, Marissa
Ramos Rodríguez, Andrés
Rennie, Joseph
Rojas Kirby, Gordon
Affiliation
Univ Arizona, Dept MathIssue Date
2020-02-07
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The Electronic Journal of CombinatoricsCitation
Christensen, A., Harris, P. E., Jones, Z., Loving, M., Rodríguez, A. R., Rennie, J., & Kirby, G. R. (2019). A Generalization of Parking Functions Allowing Backward Movement. Electronic Journal of Combinatorics, 27(1), 1-33.Rights
Alex Christensen, Pamela E. Harris, Zakiya Jones, Marissa Loving, Andrés Ramos Rodríguez, Joseph Rennie, Gordon Rojas Kirby. Released under the CC BY license (International 4.0).Collection Information
This item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at repository@u.library.arizona.edu.Abstract
Classical parking functions are defined as the parking preferences for n cars driving (from west to east) down a one-way street containing parking spaces labeled from 1 to n (from west to east). Cars drive down the street toward their preferred spot and park there if the spot is available. Otherwise, the car continues driving down the street and takes the first available parking space, if such a space exists. If all cars can park using this parking rule, we call the n-tuple containing the cars' parking preferences a parking function. In this paper, we introduce a generalization of the parking rule allowing cars whose preferred space is taken to first proceed up to k spaces west of their preferred spot to park before proceeding east if all of those k spaces are occupied. We call parking preferences which allow all cars to park under this new parking rule k-Naples parking functions of length n. This generalization gives a natural interpolation between classical parking functions, the case when k = 0, and all n-tuples of positive integers 1 to n, the case when k >= n - 1. Our main result provides a recursive formula for counting k-Naples parking functions of length n. We also give a characterization for the k =1 case by introducing a new function that maps 1-Naples parking functions to classical parking functions, i.e. 0-Naples parking functions. Lastly, we present a bijection between k-Naples parking functions of length n whose entries are in weakly decreasing order and a family of signature Dyck paths.Note
Open access journalEISSN
1077-8926DOI
10.37236/8948Version
Final published versionae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.37236/8948
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Alex Christensen, Pamela E. Harris, Zakiya Jones, Marissa Loving, Andrés Ramos Rodríguez, Joseph Rennie, Gordon Rojas Kirby. Released under the CC BY license (International 4.0).