3,140 research outputs found

    Exact Computation of a Manifold Metric, via Lipschitz Embeddings and Shortest Paths on a Graph

    Full text link
    Data-sensitive metrics adapt distances locally based the density of data points with the goal of aligning distances and some notion of similarity. In this paper, we give the first exact algorithm for computing a data-sensitive metric called the nearest neighbor metric. In fact, we prove the surprising result that a previously published 33-approximation is an exact algorithm. The nearest neighbor metric can be viewed as a special case of a density-based distance used in machine learning, or it can be seen as an example of a manifold metric. Previous computational research on such metrics despaired of computing exact distances on account of the apparent difficulty of minimizing over all continuous paths between a pair of points. We leverage the exact computation of the nearest neighbor metric to compute sparse spanners and persistent homology. We also explore the behavior of the metric built from point sets drawn from an underlying distribution and consider the more general case of inputs that are finite collections of path-connected compact sets. The main results connect several classical theories such as the conformal change of Riemannian metrics, the theory of positive definite functions of Schoenberg, and screw function theory of Schoenberg and Von Neumann. We develop novel proof techniques based on the combination of screw functions and Lipschitz extensions that may be of independent interest.Comment: 15 page

    Lower bounds on the dilation of plane spanners

    Full text link
    (I) We exhibit a set of 23 points in the plane that has dilation at least 1.43081.4308, improving the previously best lower bound of 1.41611.4161 for the worst-case dilation of plane spanners. (II) For every integer n13n\geq13, there exists an nn-element point set SS such that the degree 3 dilation of SS denoted by δ0(S,3) equals 1+3=2.7321\delta_0(S,3) \text{ equals } 1+\sqrt{3}=2.7321\ldots in the domain of plane geometric spanners. In the same domain, we show that for every integer n6n\geq6, there exists a an nn-element point set SS such that the degree 4 dilation of SS denoted by δ0(S,4) equals 1+(55)/2=2.1755\delta_0(S,4) \text{ equals } 1 + \sqrt{(5-\sqrt{5})/2}=2.1755\ldots The previous best lower bound of 1.41611.4161 holds for any degree. (III) For every integer n6n\geq6 , there exists an nn-element point set SS such that the stretch factor of the greedy triangulation of SS is at least 2.02682.0268.Comment: Revised definitions in the introduction; 23 pages, 15 figures; 2 table

    Boundary Spanning in Academia: Antecedents and Near-Term Consequences of Academic Entrepreneurialism

    Get PDF
    Analyzing the pathways of people who earned interdisciplinary research doctorates in the United States in 2010, we generate three main findings while controlling for gender, ethnicity, discipline, and age. First, individuals who complete an interdisciplinary dissertation display near-term income risk since they tend to earn nearly $1,700 less in the year after graduation. Second, students whose fathers earned a college degree demonstrated a .8% higher probability of pursuing interdisciplinary research. Third, the probability that non-citizens pursue interdisciplinary dissertation work is 4.7% higher when compared with US citizens. Our findings quantify the risks of interdisciplinary work and contribute to policy debates

    Fault-Tolerant Spanners: Better and Simpler

    Full text link
    A natural requirement of many distributed structures is fault-tolerance: after some failures, whatever remains from the structure should still be effective for whatever remains from the network. In this paper we examine spanners of general graphs that are tolerant to vertex failures, and significantly improve their dependence on the number of faults rr, for all stretch bounds. For stretch k3k \geq 3 we design a simple transformation that converts every kk-spanner construction with at most f(n)f(n) edges into an rr-fault-tolerant kk-spanner construction with at most O(r3logn)f(2n/r)O(r^3 \log n) \cdot f(2n/r) edges. Applying this to standard greedy spanner constructions gives rr-fault tolerant kk-spanners with O~(r2n1+2k+1)\tilde O(r^{2} n^{1+\frac{2}{k+1}}) edges. The previous construction by Chechik, Langberg, Peleg, and Roddity [STOC 2009] depends similarly on nn but exponentially on rr (approximately like krk^r). For the case k=2k=2 and unit-length edges, an O(rlogn)O(r \log n)-approximation algorithm is known from recent work of Dinitz and Krauthgamer [arXiv 2010], where several spanner results are obtained using a common approach of rounding a natural flow-based linear programming relaxation. Here we use a different (stronger) LP relaxation and improve the approximation ratio to O(logn)O(\log n), which is, notably, independent of the number of faults rr. We further strengthen this bound in terms of the maximum degree by using the \Lovasz Local Lemma. Finally, we show that most of our constructions are inherently local by designing equivalent distributed algorithms in the LOCAL model of distributed computation.Comment: 17 page

    An FPT Algorithm for Minimum Additive Spanner Problem

    Get PDF
    For a positive integer t and a graph G, an additive t-spanner of G is a spanning subgraph in which the distance between every pair of vertices is at most the original distance plus t. The Minimum Additive t-Spanner Problem is to find an additive t-spanner with the minimum number of edges in a given graph, which is known to be NP-hard. Since we need to care about global properties of graphs when we deal with additive t-spanners, the Minimum Additive t-Spanner Problem is hard to handle and hence only few results are known for it. In this paper, we study the Minimum Additive t-Spanner Problem from the viewpoint of parameterized complexity. We formulate a parameterized version of the problem in which the number of removed edges is regarded as a parameter, and give a fixed-parameter algorithm for it. We also extend our result to the case with both a multiplicative approximation factor ? and an additive approximation parameter ?, which we call (?, ?)-spanners

    Social Interaction and R & D Project Performance

    Get PDF
    [Excerpt] The purpose of this working paper is to present some initial findings from research currently being conducted on the effect of informal structures of communication and interaction on the product development process. The general hypothesis of the study is that higher levels of communication are associated with more effective working relationships among the different functional groups working on product innovation. The first part of this paper will review previous work in the area. Part II develops the questions of the current study. Part III outlines the methods used to address the research questions. Part IV presents the results from an initial pilot study performed within one organization. The final section discusses these results in terms of their implications for the management of innovation

    A Linear-Size Logarithmic Stretch Path-Reporting Distance Oracle for General Graphs

    Full text link
    In 2001 Thorup and Zwick devised a distance oracle, which given an nn-vertex undirected graph and a parameter kk, has size O(kn1+1/k)O(k n^{1+1/k}). Upon a query (u,v)(u,v) their oracle constructs a (2k1)(2k-1)-approximate path Π\Pi between uu and vv. The query time of the Thorup-Zwick's oracle is O(k)O(k), and it was subsequently improved to O(1)O(1) by Chechik. A major drawback of the oracle of Thorup and Zwick is that its space is Ω(nlogn)\Omega(n \cdot \log n). Mendel and Naor devised an oracle with space O(n1+1/k)O(n^{1+1/k}) and stretch O(k)O(k), but their oracle can only report distance estimates and not actual paths. In this paper we devise a path-reporting distance oracle with size O(n1+1/k)O(n^{1+1/k}), stretch O(k)O(k) and query time O(nϵ)O(n^\epsilon), for an arbitrarily small ϵ>0\epsilon > 0. In particular, our oracle can provide logarithmic stretch using linear size. Another variant of our oracle has size O(nloglogn)O(n \log\log n), polylogarithmic stretch, and query time O(loglogn)O(\log\log n). For unweighted graphs we devise a distance oracle with multiplicative stretch O(1)O(1), additive stretch O(β(k))O(\beta(k)), for a function β()\beta(\cdot), space O(n1+1/kβ)O(n^{1+1/k} \cdot \beta), and query time O(nϵ)O(n^\epsilon), for an arbitrarily small constant ϵ>0\epsilon >0. The tradeoff between multiplicative stretch and size in these oracles is far below girth conjecture threshold (which is stretch 2k12k-1 and size O(n1+1/k)O(n^{1+1/k})). Breaking the girth conjecture tradeoff is achieved by exhibiting a tradeoff of different nature between additive stretch β(k)\beta(k) and size O(n1+1/k)O(n^{1+1/k}). A similar type of tradeoff was exhibited by a construction of (1+ϵ,β)(1+\epsilon,\beta)-spanners due to Elkin and Peleg. However, so far (1+ϵ,β)(1+\epsilon,\beta)-spanners had no counterpart in the distance oracles' world. An important novel tool that we develop on the way to these results is a {distance-preserving path-reporting oracle}
    corecore