The study of Succinct representation of graphs was initiated by Galperin and Wigderson in a paper from 1983, where they prove that for many simple problems like finding a triangle in a graph, the corresponding succinct version in $\mathsf{NP}$-complete. Papadimitriou and Yanakkakis further this line of research, and prove that for a problem $\Pi$ which is $\mathsf{NP}$-complete/$\mathsf{P}$-complete, the corresponding Succinct version, namely Succinct $\Pi$ is respectively, $\mathsf{NEXP}$-complete and $\mathsf{EXP}$-complete. (They also show that if $\Pi$ is $\mathsf{NL}$-complete, then Succinct $\Pi$ is $\mathsf{PSPACE}$-complete.
Now my question is, are there any problems $\Pi$ known for which, the corresponding Succinct version is in $\mathsf{P}$? I'd be interested in knowing about any other related results(both positive and impossibility results, if any) which I might have missed above. (I couldn't locate anything of interest by a google search, since search words like succinct, representation, problems, graphs lead to just almost any complexity result! :))