3 research outputs found
Algorithms for Stable Matching and Clustering in a Grid
We study a discrete version of a geometric stable marriage problem originally
proposed in a continuous setting by Hoffman, Holroyd, and Peres, in which
points in the plane are stably matched to cluster centers, as prioritized by
their distances, so that each cluster center is apportioned a set of points of
equal area. We show that, for a discretization of the problem to an
grid of pixels with centers, the problem can be solved in time , and we experiment with two slower but more practical algorithms and
a hybrid method that switches from one of these algorithms to the other to gain
greater efficiency than either algorithm alone. We also show how to combine
geometric stable matchings with a -means clustering algorithm, so as to
provide a geometric political-districting algorithm that views distance in
economic terms, and we experiment with weighted versions of stable -means in
order to improve the connectivity of the resulting clusters.Comment: 23 pages, 12 figures. To appear (without the appendices) at the 18th
International Workshop on Combinatorial Image Analysis, June 19-21, 2017,
Plovdiv, Bulgari
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New Applications of the Nearest-Neighbor Chain Algorithm
The nearest-neighbor chain algorithm was proposed in the eighties as a way to speed up certain hierarchical clustering algorithms. In the first part of the dissertation, we show that its application is not limited to clustering. We apply it to a variety of geometric and combinatorial problems. In each case, we show that the nearest-neighbor chain algorithm finds the same solution as a preexistent greedy algorithm, but often with an improved runtime. We obtain speedups over greedy algorithms for Euclidean TSP, Steiner TSP in planar graphs, straight skeletons, a geometric coverage problem, and three stable matching models. In the second part, we study the stable-matching Voronoi diagram, a type of plane partition which combines properties of stable matchings and Voronoi diagrams. We propose political redistricting as an application. We also show that it is impossible to compute this diagram in an algebraic model of computation, and give three algorithmic approaches to overcome this obstacle. One of them is based on the nearest-neighbor chain algorithm, linking the two parts together
Optimal visibility algorithms for binary images on the hypercube
Consider a n×n binary image. Given a direction D, the parallel visibility problem consists of determining for each pixel of the image the portion that is visible (i.e., not obstructed by any other black pixel of the image) in direction D from infinity. A related problem, referred to as point visibility, is to compute for each pixel the portion that is visible from a given point p. In this paper, we derive O(log n) time SIMD algorithms for each of these two problems on the hypercube, where one processor is assigned to every pixel of the image. Since the worst case communication distance of two processors in a n2-processor hypercube is 2 log n, it follows that both of the above algorithms are asymptotically optimal