2,914 research outputs found
Generic Subsequence Matching Framework: Modularity, Flexibility, Efficiency
Subsequence matching has appeared to be an ideal approach for solving many
problems related to the fields of data mining and similarity retrieval. It has
been shown that almost any data class (audio, image, biometrics, signals) is or
can be represented by some kind of time series or string of symbols, which can
be seen as an input for various subsequence matching approaches. The variety of
data types, specific tasks and their partial or full solutions is so wide that
the choice, implementation and parametrization of a suitable solution for a
given task might be complicated and time-consuming; a possibly fruitful
combination of fragments from different research areas may not be obvious nor
easy to realize. The leading authors of this field also mention the
implementation bias that makes difficult a proper comparison of competing
approaches. Therefore we present a new generic Subsequence Matching Framework
(SMF) that tries to overcome the aforementioned problems by a uniform frame
that simplifies and speeds up the design, development and evaluation of
subsequence matching related systems. We identify several relatively separate
subtasks solved differently over the literature and SMF enables to combine them
in straightforward manner achieving new quality and efficiency. This framework
can be used in many application domains and its components can be reused
effectively. Its strictly modular architecture and openness enables also
involvement of efficient solutions from different fields, for instance
efficient metric-based indexes. This is an extended version of a paper
published on DEXA 2012.Comment: This is an extended version of a paper published on DEXA 201
De Novo Assembly of Nucleotide Sequences in a Compressed Feature Space
Sequencing technologies allow for an in-depth analysis
of biological species but the size of the generated datasets
introduce a number of analytical challenges. Recently, we
demonstrated the application of numerical sequence representations
and data transformations for the alignment of short
reads to a reference genome. Here, we expand out approach
for de novo assembly of short reads. Our results demonstrate
that highly compressed data can encapsulate the signal suffi-
ciently to accurately assemble reads to big contigs or complete
genomes
Computing and Visualizing Dynamic Time Warping Alignments in R: The dtw Package
Dynamic time warping is a popular technique for comparing time series, providing both a distance measure that is insensitive to local compression and stretches and the warping which optimally deforms one of the two input series onto the other. A variety of algorithms and constraints have been discussed in the literature. The dtw package provides an unification of them; it allows R users to compute time series alignments mixing freely a variety of continuity constraints, restriction windows, endpoints, local distance definitions, and so on. The package also provides functions for visualizing alignments and constraints using several classic diagram types.
Upper and lower bounds for dynamic data structures on strings
We consider a range of simply stated dynamic data structure problems on
strings. An update changes one symbol in the input and a query asks us to
compute some function of the pattern of length and a substring of a longer
text. We give both conditional and unconditional lower bounds for variants of
exact matching with wildcards, inner product, and Hamming distance computation
via a sequence of reductions. As an example, we show that there does not exist
an time algorithm for a large range of these problems
unless the online Boolean matrix-vector multiplication conjecture is false. We
also provide nearly matching upper bounds for most of the problems we consider.Comment: Accepted at STACS'1
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