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Journal ArticleDOI

Gromov–Wasserstein Distances and the Metric Approach to Object Matching

Facundo Mémoli
- 01 Aug 2011 - 
- Vol. 11, Iss: 4, pp 417-487
TLDR
This paper discusses certain modifications of the ideas concerning the Gromov–Hausdorff distance which have the goal of modeling and tackling the practical problems of object matching and comparison by proving explicit lower bounds for the proposed distance that involve many of the invariants previously reported by researchers.
Abstract
This paper discusses certain modifications of the ideas concerning the Gromov–Hausdorff distance which have the goal of modeling and tackling the practical problems of object matching and comparison. Objects are viewed as metric measure spaces, and based on ideas from mass transportation, a Gromov–Wasserstein type of distance between objects is defined. This reformulation yields a distance between objects which is more amenable to practical computations but retains all the desirable theoretical underpinnings. The theoretical properties of this new notion of distance are studied, and it is established that it provides a strict metric on the collection of isomorphism classes of metric measure spaces. Furthermore, the topology generated by this metric is studied, and sufficient conditions for the pre-compactness of families of metric measure spaces are identified. A second goal of this paper is to establish links to several other practical methods proposed in the literature for comparing/matching shapes in precise terms. This is done by proving explicit lower bounds for the proposed distance that involve many of the invariants previously reported by researchers. These lower bounds can be computed in polynomial time. The numerical implementations of the ideas are discussed and computational examples are presented.

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References
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On the existence of probability measures with given marginals

TL;DR: In this paper, the conditions générales d'utilisation (http://www.numdam.org/legal.php) of a fichier do not necessarily imply a mention of copyright.
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Group Actions, Homeomorphisms, and Matching: A General Framework

TL;DR: Left-invariant metrics are defined on the product G × I thus allowing the generation of transformations of the background geometry as well as the image values, and structural generation in which image values are changed supporting notions such as tissue creation in carrying one image to another.
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One Point Isometric Matching with the Heat Kernel

TL;DR: It is shown that under mild genericity conditions, a single correspondence can be used to recover an isometry defined on entire shapes, and thus the space of all isometries can be parameterized by one correspondence between a pair of points.
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A Theoretical and Computational Framework for Isometry Invariant Recognition of Point Cloud Data

TL;DR: A geometric framework for comparing manifolds given by point clouds is presented and the underlying theory is based on Gromov-Hausdorff distances, leading to isometry invariant and completely geometric comparisons.