3,188 research outputs found
Code Construction and Decoding Algorithms for Semi-Quantitative Group Testing with Nonuniform Thresholds
We analyze a new group testing scheme, termed semi-quantitative group
testing, which may be viewed as a concatenation of an adder channel and a
discrete quantizer. Our focus is on non-uniform quantizers with arbitrary
thresholds. For the most general semi-quantitative group testing model, we
define three new families of sequences capturing the constraints on the code
design imposed by the choice of the thresholds. The sequences represent
extensions and generalizations of Bh and certain types of super-increasing and
lexicographically ordered sequences, and they lead to code structures amenable
for efficient recursive decoding. We describe the decoding methods and provide
an accompanying computational complexity and performance analysis
Geometric Rounding and Feature Separation in Meshes
Geometric rounding of a mesh is the task of approximating its vertex
coordinates by floating point numbers while preserving mesh structure.
Geometric rounding allows algorithms of computational geometry to interface
with numerical algorithms. We present a practical geometric rounding algorithm
for 3D triangle meshes that preserves the topology of the mesh. The basis of
the algorithm is a novel strategy: 1) modify the mesh to achieve a feature
separation that prevents topology changes when the coordinates change by the
rounding unit; and 2) round each vertex coordinate to the closest floating
point number. Feature separation is also useful on its own, for example for
satisfying minimum separation rules in CAD models. We demonstrate a robust,
accurate implementation
Data-driven network alignment
Biological network alignment (NA) aims to find a node mapping between
species' molecular networks that uncovers similar network regions, thus
allowing for transfer of functional knowledge between the aligned nodes.
However, current NA methods do not end up aligning functionally related nodes.
A likely reason is that they assume it is topologically similar nodes that are
functionally related. However, we show that this assumption does not hold well.
So, a paradigm shift is needed with how the NA problem is approached. We
redefine NA as a data-driven framework, TARA (daTA-dRiven network Alignment),
which attempts to learn the relationship between topological relatedness and
functional relatedness without assuming that topological relatedness
corresponds to topological similarity, like traditional NA methods do. TARA
trains a classifier to predict whether two nodes from different networks are
functionally related based on their network topological patterns. We find that
TARA is able to make accurate predictions. TARA then takes each pair of nodes
that are predicted as related to be part of an alignment. Like traditional NA
methods, TARA uses this alignment for the across-species transfer of functional
knowledge. Clearly, TARA as currently implemented uses topological but not
protein sequence information for this task. We find that TARA outperforms
existing state-of-the-art NA methods that also use topological information,
WAVE and SANA, and even outperforms or complements a state-of-the-art NA method
that uses both topological and sequence information, PrimAlign. Hence, adding
sequence information to TARA, which is our future work, is likely to further
improve its performance
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