438 research outputs found

    Constructing Intrinsic Delaunay Triangulations of Submanifolds

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    We describe an algorithm to construct an intrinsic Delaunay triangulation of a smooth closed submanifold of Euclidean space. Using results established in a companion paper on the stability of Delaunay triangulations on δ\delta-generic point sets, we establish sampling criteria which ensure that the intrinsic Delaunay complex coincides with the restricted Delaunay complex and also with the recently introduced tangential Delaunay complex. The algorithm generates a point set that meets the required criteria while the tangential complex is being constructed. In this way the computation of geodesic distances is avoided, the runtime is only linearly dependent on the ambient dimension, and the Delaunay complexes are guaranteed to be triangulations of the manifold

    A probabilistic approach to reducing the algebraic complexity of computing Delaunay triangulations

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    Computing Delaunay triangulations in Rd\mathbb{R}^d involves evaluating the so-called in\_sphere predicate that determines if a point xx lies inside, on or outside the sphere circumscribing d+1d+1 points p0,,pdp_0,\ldots ,p_d. This predicate reduces to evaluating the sign of a multivariate polynomial of degree d+2d+2 in the coordinates of the points x,p0,,pdx, \, p_0,\, \ldots,\, p_d. Despite much progress on exact geometric computing, the fact that the degree of the polynomial increases with dd makes the evaluation of the sign of such a polynomial problematic except in very low dimensions. In this paper, we propose a new approach that is based on the witness complex, a weak form of the Delaunay complex introduced by Carlsson and de Silva. The witness complex Wit(L,W)\mathrm{Wit} (L,W) is defined from two sets LL and WW in some metric space XX: a finite set of points LL on which the complex is built, and a set WW of witnesses that serves as an approximation of XX. A fundamental result of de Silva states that Wit(L,W)=Del(L)\mathrm{Wit}(L,W)=\mathrm{Del} (L) if W=X=RdW=X=\mathbb{R}^d. In this paper, we give conditions on LL that ensure that the witness complex and the Delaunay triangulation coincide when WW is a finite set, and we introduce a new perturbation scheme to compute a perturbed set LL' close to LL such that Del(L)=wit(L,W)\mathrm{Del} (L')= \mathrm{wit} (L', W). Our perturbation algorithm is a geometric application of the Moser-Tardos constructive proof of the Lov\'asz local lemma. The only numerical operations we use are (squared) distance comparisons (i.e., predicates of degree 2). The time-complexity of the algorithm is sublinear in W|W|. Interestingly, although the algorithm does not compute any measure of simplex quality, a lower bound on the thickness of the output simplices can be guaranteed.Comment: 24 page

    An obstruction to Delaunay triangulations in Riemannian manifolds

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    Delaunay has shown that the Delaunay complex of a finite set of points PP of Euclidean space Rm\mathbb{R}^m triangulates the convex hull of PP, provided that PP satisfies a mild genericity property. Voronoi diagrams and Delaunay complexes can be defined for arbitrary Riemannian manifolds. However, Delaunay's genericity assumption no longer guarantees that the Delaunay complex will yield a triangulation; stronger assumptions on PP are required. A natural one is to assume that PP is sufficiently dense. Although results in this direction have been claimed, we show that sample density alone is insufficient to ensure that the Delaunay complex triangulates a manifold of dimension greater than 2.Comment: This is a revision and extension of a note that appeared as an appendix in the (otherwise unpublished) report arXiv:1303.649

    Only distances are required to reconstruct submanifolds

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    In this paper, we give the first algorithm that outputs a faithful reconstruction of a submanifold of Euclidean space without maintaining or even constructing complicated data structures such as Voronoi diagrams or Delaunay complexes. Our algorithm uses the witness complex and relies on the stability of power protection, a notion introduced in this paper. The complexity of the algorithm depends exponentially on the intrinsic dimension of the manifold, rather than the dimension of ambient space, and linearly on the dimension of the ambient space. Another interesting feature of this work is that no explicit coordinates of the points in the point sample is needed. The algorithm only needs the distance matrix as input, i.e., only distance between points in the point sample as input.Comment: Major revision, 16 figures, 47 page

    Should health professionals screen women for domestic violence? : systematic review

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    Objective To assess the evidence for the acceptability and effectiveness of screening women for domestic violence in healthcare settings. Design Systematic review of published quantitative studies. Search strategy Three electronic databases (Medline, Embase, and CINAHL) were searched for articles published in the English language up to February 2001. Included studies Surveys that elicited the attitudes of women and health professionals on the screening of women in health settings; comparative studies conducted in healthcare settings that measured rates of identification of domestic violence in the presence and absence of screening; studies measuring outcomes of interventions for women identified in health settings who experience abuse from a male partner or ex­partner compared with abused women not receiving an intervention. Results 20 papers met the inclusion criteria. In four surveys, 43­85% of women respondents found screening in healthcare settings acceptable. Two surveys of health professionals' views found that two thirds of physicians and almost half of emergency department nurses were not in favour of screening. In nine studies of screening compared with no screening, most detected a greater proportion of abused women identified by healthcare professionals. Six studies of interventions used weak study designs and gave inconsistent results. Other than increased referral to outside agencies, little evidence exists for changes in important outcomes such as decreased exposure to violence. No studies measured quality of life, mental health outcomes, or potential harm to women from screening programmes. Conclusion Although domestic violence is a common problem with major health consequences for women, implementation of screening programmes in healthcare settings cannot be justified. Evidence of the benefit of specific interventions and lack of harm from screening is needed

    Local Criteria for Triangulation of Manifolds

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    We present criteria for establishing a triangulation of a manifold. Given a manifold M, a simplicial complex A, and a map H from the underlying space of A to M, our criteria are presented in local coordinate charts for M, and ensure that H is a homeomorphism. These criteria do not require a differentiable structure, or even an explicit metric on M. No Delaunay property of A is assumed. The result provides a triangulation guarantee for algorithms that construct a simplicial complex by working in local coordinate patches. Because the criteria are easily verified in such a setting, they are expected to be of general use

    Performance of LED-Based Fluorescence Microscopy to Diagnose Tuberculosis in a Peripheral Health Centre in Nairobi.

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    Sputum microscopy is the only tuberculosis (TB) diagnostic available at peripheral levels of care in resource limited countries. Its sensitivity is low, particularly in high HIV prevalence settings. Fluorescence microscopy (FM) can improve performance of microscopy and with the new light emitting diode (LED) technologies could be appropriate for peripheral settings. The study aimed to compare the performance of LED-FM versus Ziehl-Neelsen (ZN) microscopy and to assess feasibility of LED-FM at a low level of care in a high HIV prevalence country
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