Definition of 'replication of $v$' is
Suppose $v \in V(G)$. Replication of $v$ is constructing $G'$ by adding a new vertex $v'$ such that $N_{G'}(v')=N_G(v) \cup \{v\}$.
And the following statement is well-known fact(you can find a proof by googling).
Replication of a single vertex conserves perfectivity, i.e., $G'$ obtained from a perfect graph $G$ by replication of $v \in V(G)$ is still perfect.
But I am curious whether the following statement is also true:
$G''$ obtained from $G$ by adding a new vertex $v''$ such that $N_{G''}(v'')=N_G(v)$ is perfect.
Adding $v''$ looks similar to the replication, but it does not contain $v$ in neighborhood of $v''$.
I could not find any counterexample to disprove it.
And proving it seems to be different from the proof of the first statement, so I cannot follow its steps.
Would you help me?