- 
							
								Aleksandar Ilić
							
              						
 
											- 
							
								Sandi Klavžar
							
              						
 
											- 
							
								Yoomi Rho
							
              						
 
									
			
																												
							
									
				
										Keywords:
				
				
																		binary words, 													combinatorics on words, 													words avoiding a pattern, 													parity index, 													generalized Fibonacci cubes															
			
			
										
					
Abstract
					Let $f$ be a binary word and let ${\cal F}_d(f)$ be the set of words of length $d$ which do not contain $f$ as a factor (alias words that avoid the pattern $f$). A word is called even/odd if it contains an even/odd number of 1s. The parity index of $f$ (of dimension $d$) is introduced as the difference between the number of even words and the number of odd words in ${\cal F}_d(f)$. A word $f$ is called prime if every nontrivial suffix of $f$ is different from the prefix of $f$ of the same length. It is proved that if $f$ is a power of a prime word, then the absolute value of the parity index of $f$ is at most 1. We conjecture that no other word has this property and prove the conjecture for words $0^r1^s0^t$, $r,s,t \geq 1$. The conjecture has also been verified by computer for all words $f$ of length at most 10 and all $d\le 31$.
				
			
			
																																																																
					
													Author Biographies
											
																		
								
																																							Aleksandar Ilić, University of Niš, Serbia
																	
								
									Faculty of Sciences and Mathematics
								
							 
																								
								
																																							Sandi Klavžar, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia \\
and \\
University of Maribor, Slovenia
																	
								
									Faculty of Mathematics and Physics \\
University of Ljubljana, Slovenia \\
and \\
Faculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics\\ University of Maribor, Slovenia
 
 
								 
							 
																								
								
																																							Yoomi Rho, University of incheon
																	
								
									Dept of Mathematics