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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

New applications of random sampling in computational geometry

Kenneth L. Clarkson
- 01 Jun 1987 - 
- Vol. 2, Iss: 1, pp 195-222
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TLDR
This paper gives several new demonstrations of the usefulness of random sampling techniques in computational geometry by creating a search structure for arrangements of hyperplanes by sampling the hyperplanes and using information from the resulting arrangement to divide and conquer.
Abstract
This paper gives several new demonstrations of the usefulness of random sampling techniques in computational geometry. One new algorithm creates a search structure for arrangements of hyperplanes by sampling the hyperplanes and using information from the resulting arrangement to divide and conquer. This algorithm requiresO(sd+?) expected preprocessing time to build a search structure for an arrangement ofs hyperplanes ind dimensions. The expectation, as with all expected times reported here, is with respect to the random behavior of the algorithm, and holds for any input. Given the data structure, and a query pointp, the cell of the arrangement containingp can be found inO(logs) worst-case time. (The bound holds for any fixed ?>0, with the constant factors dependent ond and ?.) Using point-plane duality, the algorithm may be used for answering halfspace range queries. Another algorithm finds random samples of simplices to determine the separation distance of two polytopes. The algorithm uses expectedO(n[d/2]) time, wheren is the total number of vertices of the two polytopes. This matches previous results [10] for the cased = 3 and extends them. Another algorithm samples points in the plane to determine their orderk Voronoi diagram, and requires expectedO(s1+?k) time fors points. (It is assumed that no four of the points are cocircular.) This sharpens the boundO(sk2 logs) for Lee's algorithm [21], andO(s2 logs+k(s?k) log2s) for Chazelle and Edelsbrunner's algorithm [4]. Finally, random sampling is used to show that any set ofs points inE3 hasO(sk2 log8s/(log logs)6) distinctj-sets withj≤k. (ForS ?Ed, a setS? ?S with |S?| =j is aj-set ofS if there is a half-spaceh+ withS? =S ?h+.) This sharpens with respect tok the previous boundO(sk5) [5]. The proof of the bound given here is an instance of a "probabilistic method" [15].

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BookDOI

Advances in computer graphics V

TL;DR: This book presents the tutorial notes of the Eurographics '89 conference held in Hamburg in September 1989, which includes chapters about visualization of scientific data, color, solid modeling, computational geometry, object-oriented graphics, page description languages, and standards for computer graphics and product model data.
Book ChapterDOI

A Randomized Divide and Conquer Algorithm for Higher-Order Abstract Voronoi Diagrams

TL;DR: A randomized divide-and-conquer algorithm to compute the order-\(k\) abstract Voronoi diagram in expected \(O(kn^{1+\varepsilon })\) operations is developed.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A Theory-Based Decision Heuristic for DPLL(T)

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A nearly optimal parallel algorithm for the Voronoi diagram of a convex polygon

TL;DR: These algorithms use the solution to the duration-unknown task scheduling problem due to Cole and Vishkin and the optimal parallel algorithm for the convex hull of a polygon due to Wagener and are randomized in the sense that for any given l>0 they terminate in time O(log n) with probability greater than 1n−l.
References
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Book

The Art of Computer Programming

TL;DR: The arrangement of this invention provides a strong vibration free hold-down mechanism while avoiding a large pressure drop to the flow of coolant fluid.

Computational geometry. an introduction

TL;DR: This book offers a coherent treatment, at the graduate textbook level, of the field that has come to be known in the last decade or so as computational geometry.
Book ChapterDOI

On the Uniform Convergence of Relative Frequencies of Events to Their Probabilities

TL;DR: This chapter reproduces the English translation by B. Seckler of the paper by Vapnik and Chervonenkis in which they gave proofs for the innovative results they had obtained in a draft form in July 1966 and announced in 1968 in their note in Soviet Mathematics Doklady.
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Computational Geometry: An Introduction

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a coherent treatment of computational geometry in the plane, at the graduate textbook level, and point out the way to the solution of the more challenging problems in dimensions higher than two.