Block graphs are sometimes erroneously called Husimi trees (after Kôdi Husimi),[2] but that name more properly refers to cactus graphs, graphs in which every nontrivial biconnected component is a cycle.[3]
Block graphs may be characterized as the intersection graphs of the blocks of arbitrary undirected graphs.[4]
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^See, e.g., MR0659742, a 1983 review by Robert E. Jamison of another paper referring to block graphs as Husimi trees; Jamison attributes the mistake to an error in a book by Mehdi Behzad and Gary Chartrand.