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Several different types of identification problems have been already studied in the literature, where the objective is to distinguish any two vertices of a graph by their unique neighborhoods in a suitably chosen dominating or total-dominating set of the graph, often referred to as a code. To study such problems under a unifying point of view, reformulations of the already studied problems in terms of covering problems in suitably constructed hypergraphs have been provided. Analyzing these hypergraph representations, we introduce a new separation property, called full-separation, which has not yet been considered in the literature so far. We study it in combination with both domination and total-domination, and call the resulting codes full-separating-dominating codes (or FD-codes for short) and full-separating-total-dominating codes (or FTD-codes for short), respectively. We address the conditions for the existence of FD- and FTD-codes, bounds for their size and their relation to codes of the other types. We show that the problems of determining an FD- or an FTD-code of minimum cardinality in a graph is NP-hard. We also show that the cardinalities of minimum FD- and FTD-codes differ by at most one, but that it is NP-complete to decide if they are equal for a given graph in general. We find the exact values of minimum cardinalities of the FD- and FTD-codes on some familiar graph classes like paths, cycles, half-graphs and spiders. This helps us compare the two codes with other codes on these graph families thereby exhibiting extremal cases for several lower bounds.
Chakraborty et al. (Mon,) studied this question.