Abstract
The paper offers an overview over selected results in the literature on partially ordered patterns (POPs) in permutations, words and compositions. The POPs give rise in connection with co-unimodal patterns, peaks and valleys in permutations, Horse permutations, Catalan, Narayana, and Pell numbers, bi-colored set partitions, and other combinatorial objects.
Introduction
An occurrence of a pattern τ in a permutation π is defined as a subsequence in π (of the same length as τ) whose letters are in the same relative order as those in τ. For example, the permutation 31425 has three occurrences of the pattern 1-2-3, namely the subsequences 345, 145, and 125. Generalized permutation patterns (GPs) being introduced in allow the requirement that some adjacent letters in a pattern must also be adjacent in the permutation. We indicate this requirement by removing a dash in the corresponding place. Say, if pattern 2-31 occurs in a permutation π, then the letters in π that correspond to 3 and 1 are adjacent. For example, the permutation 516423 has only one occurrence of the pattern 2-31, namely the subword 564, whereas the pattern 2-3-1 occurs, in addition, in the subwords 562 and 563. Placing “[” on the left (resp., “]” on the right) next to a pattern p means the requirement that p must begin (resp., end) from the leftmost (resp., rightmost) letter.