4,836 research outputs found
Optimal-Time Text Indexing in BWT-runs Bounded Space
Indexing highly repetitive texts --- such as genomic databases, software
repositories and versioned text collections --- has become an important problem
since the turn of the millennium. A relevant compressibility measure for
repetitive texts is , the number of runs in their Burrows-Wheeler Transform
(BWT). One of the earliest indexes for repetitive collections, the Run-Length
FM-index, used space and was able to efficiently count the number of
occurrences of a pattern of length in the text (in loglogarithmic time per
pattern symbol, with current techniques). However, it was unable to locate the
positions of those occurrences efficiently within a space bounded in terms of
. Since then, a number of other indexes with space bounded by other measures
of repetitiveness --- the number of phrases in the Lempel-Ziv parse, the size
of the smallest grammar generating the text, the size of the smallest automaton
recognizing the text factors --- have been proposed for efficiently locating,
but not directly counting, the occurrences of a pattern. In this paper we close
this long-standing problem, showing how to extend the Run-Length FM-index so
that it can locate the occurrences efficiently within space (in
loglogarithmic time each), and reaching optimal time within
space, on a RAM machine of bits. Within
space, our index can also count in optimal time .
Raising the space to , we support count and locate in
and time, which is optimal in the
packed setting and had not been obtained before in compressed space. We also
describe a structure using space that replaces the text and
extracts any text substring of length in almost-optimal time
. (...continues...
Finding approximate palindromes in strings
We introduce a novel definition of approximate palindromes in strings, and
provide an algorithm to find all maximal approximate palindromes in a string
with up to errors. Our definition is based on the usual edit operations of
approximate pattern matching, and the algorithm we give, for a string of size
on a fixed alphabet, runs in time. We also discuss two
implementation-related improvements to the algorithm, and demonstrate their
efficacy in practice by means of both experiments and an average-case analysis
Fully-Functional Suffix Trees and Optimal Text Searching in BWT-runs Bounded Space
Indexing highly repetitive texts - such as genomic databases, software
repositories and versioned text collections - has become an important problem
since the turn of the millennium. A relevant compressibility measure for
repetitive texts is r, the number of runs in their Burrows-Wheeler Transforms
(BWTs). One of the earliest indexes for repetitive collections, the Run-Length
FM-index, used O(r) space and was able to efficiently count the number of
occurrences of a pattern of length m in the text (in loglogarithmic time per
pattern symbol, with current techniques). However, it was unable to locate the
positions of those occurrences efficiently within a space bounded in terms of
r. In this paper we close this long-standing problem, showing how to extend the
Run-Length FM-index so that it can locate the occ occurrences efficiently
within O(r) space (in loglogarithmic time each), and reaching optimal time, O(m
+ occ), within O(r log log w ({\sigma} + n/r)) space, for a text of length n
over an alphabet of size {\sigma} on a RAM machine with words of w =
{\Omega}(log n) bits. Within that space, our index can also count in optimal
time, O(m). Multiplying the space by O(w/ log {\sigma}), we support count and
locate in O(dm log({\sigma})/we) and O(dm log({\sigma})/we + occ) time, which
is optimal in the packed setting and had not been obtained before in compressed
space. We also describe a structure using O(r log(n/r)) space that replaces the
text and extracts any text substring of length ` in almost-optimal time
O(log(n/r) + ` log({\sigma})/w). Within that space, we similarly provide direct
access to suffix array, inverse suffix array, and longest common prefix array
cells, and extend these capabilities to full suffix tree functionality,
typically in O(log(n/r)) time per operation.Comment: submitted version; optimal count and locate in smaller space: O(r log
log_w(n/r + sigma)
Fast Algorithm for Partial Covers in Words
A factor of a word is a cover of if every position in lies
within some occurrence of in . A word covered by thus
generalizes the idea of a repetition, that is, a word composed of exact
concatenations of . In this article we introduce a new notion of
-partial cover, which can be viewed as a relaxed variant of cover, that
is, a factor covering at least positions in . We develop a data
structure of size (where ) that can be constructed in time which we apply to compute all shortest -partial covers for a
given . We also employ it for an -time algorithm computing
a shortest -partial cover for each
Universal Compressed Text Indexing
The rise of repetitive datasets has lately generated a lot of interest in
compressed self-indexes based on dictionary compression, a rich and
heterogeneous family that exploits text repetitions in different ways. For each
such compression scheme, several different indexing solutions have been
proposed in the last two decades. To date, the fastest indexes for repetitive
texts are based on the run-length compressed Burrows-Wheeler transform and on
the Compact Directed Acyclic Word Graph. The most space-efficient indexes, on
the other hand, are based on the Lempel-Ziv parsing and on grammar compression.
Indexes for more universal schemes such as collage systems and macro schemes
have not yet been proposed. Very recently, Kempa and Prezza [STOC 2018] showed
that all dictionary compressors can be interpreted as approximation algorithms
for the smallest string attractor, that is, a set of text positions capturing
all distinct substrings. Starting from this observation, in this paper we
develop the first universal compressed self-index, that is, the first indexing
data structure based on string attractors, which can therefore be built on top
of any dictionary-compressed text representation. Let be the size of a
string attractor for a text of length . Our index takes
words of space and supports locating the
occurrences of any pattern of length in
time, for any constant . This is, in particular, the first index
for general macro schemes and collage systems. Our result shows that the
relation between indexing and compression is much deeper than what was
previously thought: the simple property standing at the core of all dictionary
compressors is sufficient to support fast indexed queries.Comment: Fixed with reviewer's comment
On the role of metaheuristic optimization in bioinformatics
Metaheuristic algorithms are employed to solve complex and large-scale optimization problems in many different fields, from transportation and smart cities to finance. This paper discusses how metaheuristic algorithms are being applied to solve different optimization problems in the area of bioinformatics. While the text provides references to many optimization problems in the area, it focuses on those that have attracted more interest from the optimization community. Among the problems analyzed, the paper discusses in more detail the molecular docking problem, the protein structure prediction, phylogenetic inference, and different string problems. In addition, references to other relevant optimization problems are also given, including those related to medical imaging or gene selection for classification. From the previous analysis, the paper generates insights on research opportunities for the Operations Research and Computer Science communities in the field of bioinformatics
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