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Journal ArticleDOI

Shortest-path queries in static networks

TLDR
This survey reviews selected approaches, algorithms, and results on shortest-path queries from these fields, with the main focus lying on the tradeoff between the index size and the query time.
Abstract
We consider the point-to-point (approximate) shortest-path query problem, which is the following generalization of the classical single-source (SSSP) and all-pairs shortest-path (APSP) problems: we are first presented with a network (graph). A so-called preprocessing algorithm may compute certain information (a data structure or index) to prepare for the next phase. After this preprocessing step, applications may ask shortest-path or distance queries, which should be answered as fast as possible.Due to its many applications in areas such as transportation, networking, and social science, this problem has been considered by researchers from various communities (sometimes under different names): algorithm engineers construct fast route planning methods; database and information systems researchers investigate materialization tradeoffs, query processing on spatial networks, and reachability queries; and theoretical computer scientists analyze distance oracles and sparse spanners. Related problems are considered for compact routing and distance labeling schemes in networking and distributed computing and for metric embeddings in geometry as well.In this survey, we review selected approaches, algorithms, and results on shortest-path queries from these fields, with the main focus lying on the tradeoff between the index size and the query time. We survey methods for general graphs as well as specialized methods for restricted graph classes, in particular for those classes with arguable practical significance such as planar graphs and complex networks.

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Book ChapterDOI

Route Planning in Transportation Networks

TL;DR: In this article, the authors survey recent advances in algorithms for route planning in transportation networks, and show that one can compute driving directions in milliseconds or less even at continental scale for road networks, while others can deal efficiently with real-time traffic.
Posted Content

Distributed Approximation Algorithms for Weighted Shortest Paths

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented an algorithm for computing both single-source shortest paths (sssp) and all-pairs shortest paths in the weighted case with a running time of O(1+o(1)).
Journal ArticleDOI

Round-Based Public Transit Routing

TL;DR: This work introduces RAPTOR, a novel round-based public transit router that computes all Pareto-optimal journeys between two random locations an order of magnitude faster than previous approaches, which easily enables interactive applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Customizable Route Planning in Road Networks

TL;DR: This work proposes the first routing engine for computing driving directions in large-scale road networks that satisfies all requirements of a real-world production system and can incorporate a new metric in less than a second, which is fast enough to support real-time traffic updates and personalized cost functions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A note on two problems in connexion with graphs

TL;DR: A tree is a graph with one and only one path between every two nodes, where at least one path exists between any two nodes and the length of each branch is given.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Formal Basis for the Heuristic Determination of Minimum Cost Paths

TL;DR: How heuristic information from the problem domain can be incorporated into a formal mathematical theory of graph searching is described and an optimality property of a class of search strategies is demonstrated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Power-Law Distributions in Empirical Data

TL;DR: This work proposes a principled statistical framework for discerning and quantifying power-law behavior in empirical data by combining maximum-likelihood fitting methods with goodness-of-fit tests based on the Kolmogorov-Smirnov (KS) statistic and likelihood ratios.

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.
Journal Article

The Small World Problem

Stanley Milgram
- 01 Jan 1967 -