A morphism is a mapping that transforms words through letter-wise substitution, where each symbol is consistently replaced by a fixed word. In the field of combinatorics on words, one topic that has attracted considerable attention is the characterization of morphisms that preserve specific properties, such as overlap-freeness, square-freeness, lexicographic order, and primitivity. Continuing this direction, we initiate the study on occurrence-preserving morphisms, which address the following fundamental question: given a morphism ϕ, two words u and v, and k ≥ 1, under what conditions does the number of occurrences of u in v equal the number of occurrences of ϕᵏ (u) in ϕᵏ (v)? To answer this question, we introduce the notion of interference-free morphisms, examine their properties, and uncover a connection to recognizable morphisms. We then present a precise characterization of occurrence-preserving morphisms in terms of interference-freeness. As applications of our characterization, we first show that there exists a bijection between the starting positions of the occurrences of u in v and those of ϕᵏ (u) in ϕᵏ (v). We then apply the characterization to the Fibonacci and Thue-Morse words to identify their minimal unique substrings (MUSs). Finally, we exploit the connection between MUSs and net occurrences to simplify existing proofs on net occurrences in these words.
Kishi et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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