4,446 research outputs found
Proximity Drawings of High-Degree Trees
A drawing of a given (abstract) tree that is a minimum spanning tree of the
vertex set is considered aesthetically pleasing. However, such a drawing can
only exist if the tree has maximum degree at most 6. What can be said for trees
of higher degree? We approach this question by supposing that a partition or
covering of the tree by subtrees of bounded degree is given. Then we show that
if the partition or covering satisfies some natural properties, then there is a
drawing of the entire tree such that each of the given subtrees is drawn as a
minimum spanning tree of its vertex set
Snapping Graph Drawings to the Grid Optimally
In geographic information systems and in the production of digital maps for
small devices with restricted computational resources one often wants to round
coordinates to a rougher grid. This removes unnecessary detail and reduces
space consumption as well as computation time. This process is called snapping
to the grid and has been investigated thoroughly from a computational-geometry
perspective. In this paper we investigate the same problem for given drawings
of planar graphs under the restriction that their combinatorial embedding must
be kept and edges are drawn straight-line. We show that the problem is NP-hard
for several objectives and provide an integer linear programming formulation.
Given a plane graph G and a positive integer w, our ILP can also be used to
draw G straight-line on a grid of width w and minimum height (if possible).Comment: Appears in the Proceedings of the 24th International Symposium on
Graph Drawing and Network Visualization (GD 2016
Rectangular Layouts and Contact Graphs
Contact graphs of isothetic rectangles unify many concepts from applications
including VLSI and architectural design, computational geometry, and GIS.
Minimizing the area of their corresponding {\em rectangular layouts} is a key
problem. We study the area-optimization problem and show that it is NP-hard to
find a minimum-area rectangular layout of a given contact graph. We present
O(n)-time algorithms that construct -area rectangular layouts for
general contact graphs and -area rectangular layouts for trees.
(For trees, this is an -approximation algorithm.) We also present an
infinite family of graphs (rsp., trees) that require (rsp.,
) area.
We derive these results by presenting a new characterization of graphs that
admit rectangular layouts using the related concept of {\em rectangular duals}.
A corollary to our results relates the class of graphs that admit rectangular
layouts to {\em rectangle of influence drawings}.Comment: 28 pages, 13 figures, 55 references, 1 appendi
On Semantic Word Cloud Representation
We study the problem of computing semantic-preserving word clouds in which
semantically related words are close to each other. While several heuristic
approaches have been described in the literature, we formalize the underlying
geometric algorithm problem: Word Rectangle Adjacency Contact (WRAC). In this
model each word is associated with rectangle with fixed dimensions, and the
goal is to represent semantically related words by ensuring that the two
corresponding rectangles touch. We design and analyze efficient polynomial-time
algorithms for some variants of the WRAC problem, show that several general
variants are NP-hard, and describe a number of approximation algorithms.
Finally, we experimentally demonstrate that our theoretically-sound algorithms
outperform the early heuristics
Software design and implementation of a contactless surface sensing NDE scanning system
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/2860226
Combinatorial Properties and Recognition of Unit Square Visibility Graphs
Unit square (grid) visibility graphs (USV and USGV, resp.) are described by axis-parallel visibility between unit squares placed (on integer grid coordinates) in the plane. We investigate combinatorial properties of these graph classes and the hardness of variants of the recognition problem, i.e., the problem of representing USGV with fixed visibilities within small area and, for USV, the general recognition problem
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