932 resultados para Approximation Classes
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* This work has been supported by the Office of Naval Research Contract Nr. N0014-91-J1343, the Army Research Office Contract Nr. DAAD 19-02-1-0028, the National Science Foundation grants DMS-0221642 and DMS-0200665, the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft grant SFB 401, the IHP Network “Breaking Complexity” funded by the European Commission and the Alexan- der von Humboldt Foundation.
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The problem of admission control of packets in communication networks is studied in the continuous time queueing framework under different classes of service and delayed information feedback. We develop and use a variant of a simulation based two timescale simultaneous perturbation stochastic approximation (SPSA) algorithm for finding an optimal feedback policy within the class of threshold type policies. Even though SPSA has originally been designed for continuous parameter optimization, its variant for the discrete parameter case is seen to work well. We give a proof of the hypothesis needed to show convergence of the algorithm on our setting along with a sketch of the convergence analysis. Extensive numerical experiments with the algorithm are illustrated for different parameter specifications. In particular, we study the effect of feedback delays on the system performance.
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The constant increase in the number of solved protein structures is of great help in understanding the basic principles behind protein folding and evolution. 3-D structural knowledge is valuable in designing and developing methods for comparison, modelling and prediction of protein structures. These approaches for structure analysis can be directly implicated in studying protein function and for drug design. The backbone of a protein structure favours certain local conformations which include alpha-helices, beta-strands and turns. Libraries of limited number of local conformations (Structural Alphabets) were developed in the past to obtain a useful categorization of backbone conformation. Protein Block (PB) is one such Structural Alphabet that gave a reasonable structure approximation of 0.42 angstrom. In this study, we use PB description of local structures to analyse conformations that are preferred sites for structural variations and insertions, among group of related folds. This knowledge can be utilized in improving tools for structure comparison that work by analysing local structure similarities. Conformational differences between homologous proteins are known to occur often in the regions comprising turns and loops. Interestingly, these differences are found to have specific preferences depending upon the structural classes of proteins. Such class-specific preferences are mainly seen in the all-beta class with changes involving short helical conformations and hairpin turns. A test carried out on a benchmark dataset also indicates that the use of knowledge on the class specific variations can improve the performance of a PB based structure comparison approach. The preference for the indel sites also seem to be confined to a few backbone conformations involving beta-turns and helix C-caps. These are mainly associated with short loops joining the regular secondary structures that mediate a reversal in the chain direction. Rare beta-turns of type I' and II' are also identified as preferred sites for insertions.
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Boxicity of a graph G(V, E) is the minimum integer k such that G can be represented as the intersection graph of k-dimensional axis parallel boxes in Rk. Equivalently, it is the minimum number of interval graphs on the vertex set V such that the intersection of their edge sets is E. It is known that boxicity cannot be approximated even for graph classes like bipartite, co-bipartite and split graphs below O(n0.5-ε)-factor, for any ε > 0 in polynomial time unless NP = ZPP. Till date, there is no well known graph class of unbounded boxicity for which even an nε-factor approximation algorithm for computing boxicity is known, for any ε < 1. In this paper, we study the boxicity problem on Circular Arc graphs - intersection graphs of arcs of a circle. We give a (2+ 1/k)-factor polynomial time approximation algorithm for computing the boxicity of any circular arc graph along with a corresponding box representation, where k ≥ 1 is its boxicity. For Normal Circular Arc(NCA) graphs, with an NCA model given, this can be improved to an additive 2-factor approximation algorithm. The time complexity of the algorithms to approximately compute the boxicity is O(mn+n2) in both these cases and in O(mn+kn2) which is at most O(n3) time we also get their corresponding box representations, where n is the number of vertices of the graph and m is its number of edges. The additive 2-factor algorithm directly works for any Proper Circular Arc graph, since computing an NCA model for it can be done in polynomial time.
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The boxicity (cubicity) of a graph G, denoted by box(G) (respectively cub(G)), is the minimum integer k such that G can be represented as the intersection graph of axis parallel boxes (cubes) in ℝ k . The problem of computing boxicity (cubicity) is known to be inapproximable in polynomial time even for graph classes like bipartite, co-bipartite and split graphs, within an O(n 0.5 − ε ) factor for any ε > 0, unless NP = ZPP. We prove that if a graph G on n vertices has a clique on n − k vertices, then box(G) can be computed in time n22O(k2logk) . Using this fact, various FPT approximation algorithms for boxicity are derived. The parameter used is the vertex (or edge) edit distance of the input graph from certain graph families of bounded boxicity - like interval graphs and planar graphs. Using the same fact, we also derive an O(nloglogn√logn√) factor approximation algorithm for computing boxicity, which, to our knowledge, is the first o(n) factor approximation algorithm for the problem. We also present an FPT approximation algorithm for computing the cubicity of graphs, with vertex cover number as the parameter.
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The boxicity (resp. cubicity) of a graph G(V, E) is the minimum integer k such that G can be represented as the intersection graph of axis parallel boxes (resp. cubes) in R-k. Equivalently, it is the minimum number of interval graphs (resp. unit interval graphs) on the vertex set V, such that the intersection of their edge sets is E. The problem of computing boxicity (resp. cubicity) is known to be inapproximable, even for restricted graph classes like bipartite, co-bipartite and split graphs, within an O(n(1-epsilon))-factor for any epsilon > 0 in polynomial time, unless NP = ZPP. For any well known graph class of unbounded boxicity, there is no known approximation algorithm that gives n(1-epsilon)-factor approximation algorithm for computing boxicity in polynomial time, for any epsilon > 0. In this paper, we consider the problem of approximating the boxicity (cubicity) of circular arc graphs intersection graphs of arcs of a circle. Circular arc graphs are known to have unbounded boxicity, which could be as large as Omega(n). We give a (2 + 1/k) -factor (resp. (2 + log n]/k)-factor) polynomial time approximation algorithm for computing the boxicity (resp. cubicity) of any circular arc graph, where k >= 1 is the value of the optimum solution. For normal circular arc (NCA) graphs, with an NCA model given, this can be improved to an additive two approximation algorithm. The time complexity of the algorithms to approximately compute the boxicity (resp. cubicity) is O(mn + n(2)) in both these cases, and in O(mn + kn(2)) = O(n(3)) time we also get their corresponding box (resp. cube) representations, where n is the number of vertices of the graph and m is its number of edges. Our additive two approximation algorithm directly works for any proper circular arc graph, since their NCA models can be computed in polynomial time. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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La texture est un élément clé pour l’interprétation des images de télédétection à fine résolution spatiale. L’intégration de l’information texturale dans un processus de classification automatisée des images se fait habituellement via des images de texture, souvent créées par le calcul de matrices de co-occurrences (MCO) des niveaux de gris. Une MCO est un histogramme des fréquences d’occurrence des paires de valeurs de pixels présentes dans les fenêtres locales, associées à tous les pixels de l’image utilisée; une paire de pixels étant définie selon un pas et une orientation donnés. Les MCO permettent le calcul de plus d’une dizaine de paramètres décrivant, de diverses manières, la distribution des fréquences, créant ainsi autant d’images texturales distinctes. L’approche de mesure des textures par MCO a été appliquée principalement sur des images de télédétection monochromes (ex. images panchromatiques, images radar monofréquence et monopolarisation). En imagerie multispectrale, une unique bande spectrale, parmi celles disponibles, est habituellement choisie pour générer des images de texture. La question que nous avons posée dans cette recherche concerne justement cette utilisation restreinte de l’information texturale dans le cas des images multispectrales. En fait, l’effet visuel d’une texture est créé, non seulement par l’agencement particulier d’objets/pixels de brillance différente, mais aussi de couleur différente. Plusieurs façons sont proposées dans la littérature pour introduire cette idée de la texture à plusieurs dimensions. Parmi celles-ci, deux en particulier nous ont intéressés dans cette recherche. La première façon fait appel aux MCO calculées bande par bande spectrale et la seconde utilise les MCO généralisées impliquant deux bandes spectrales à la fois. Dans ce dernier cas, le procédé consiste en le calcul des fréquences d’occurrence des paires de valeurs dans deux bandes spectrales différentes. Cela permet, en un seul traitement, la prise en compte dans une large mesure de la « couleur » des éléments de texture. Ces deux approches font partie des techniques dites intégratives. Pour les distinguer, nous les avons appelées dans cet ouvrage respectivement « textures grises » et « textures couleurs ». Notre recherche se présente donc comme une analyse comparative des possibilités offertes par l’application de ces deux types de signatures texturales dans le cas spécifique d’une cartographie automatisée des occupations de sol à partir d’une image multispectrale. Une signature texturale d’un objet ou d’une classe d’objets, par analogie aux signatures spectrales, est constituée d’une série de paramètres de texture mesurés sur une bande spectrale à la fois (textures grises) ou une paire de bandes spectrales à la fois (textures couleurs). Cette recherche visait non seulement à comparer les deux approches intégratives, mais aussi à identifier la composition des signatures texturales des classes d’occupation du sol favorisant leur différentiation : type de paramètres de texture / taille de la fenêtre de calcul / bandes spectrales ou combinaisons de bandes spectrales. Pour ce faire, nous avons choisi un site à l’intérieur du territoire de la Communauté Métropolitaine de Montréal (Longueuil) composé d’une mosaïque d’occupations du sol, caractéristique d’une zone semi urbaine (résidentiel, industriel/commercial, boisés, agriculture, plans d’eau…). Une image du satellite SPOT-5 (4 bandes spectrales) de 10 m de résolution spatiale a été utilisée dans cette recherche. Puisqu’une infinité d’images de texture peuvent être créées en faisant varier les paramètres de calcul des MCO et afin de mieux circonscrire notre problème nous avons décidé, en tenant compte des études publiées dans ce domaine : a) de faire varier la fenêtre de calcul de 3*3 pixels à 21*21 pixels tout en fixant le pas et l’orientation pour former les paires de pixels à (1,1), c'est-à-dire à un pas d’un pixel et une orientation de 135°; b) de limiter les analyses des MCO à huit paramètres de texture (contraste, corrélation, écart-type, énergie, entropie, homogénéité, moyenne, probabilité maximale), qui sont tous calculables par la méthode rapide de Unser, une approximation des matrices de co-occurrences, c) de former les deux signatures texturales par le même nombre d’éléments choisis d’après une analyse de la séparabilité (distance de Bhattacharya) des classes d’occupation du sol; et d) d’analyser les résultats de classification (matrices de confusion, exactitudes, coefficients Kappa) par maximum de vraisemblance pour conclure sur le potentiel des deux approches intégratives; les classes d’occupation du sol à reconnaître étaient : résidentielle basse et haute densité, commerciale/industrielle, agricole, boisés, surfaces gazonnées (incluant les golfs) et plans d’eau. Nos principales conclusions sont les suivantes a) à l’exception de la probabilité maximale, tous les autres paramètres de texture sont utiles dans la formation des signatures texturales; moyenne et écart type sont les plus utiles dans la formation des textures grises tandis que contraste et corrélation, dans le cas des textures couleurs, b) l’exactitude globale de la classification atteint un score acceptable (85%) seulement dans le cas des signatures texturales couleurs; c’est une amélioration importante par rapport aux classifications basées uniquement sur les signatures spectrales des classes d’occupation du sol dont le score est souvent situé aux alentours de 75%; ce score est atteint avec des fenêtres de calcul aux alentours de11*11 à 15*15 pixels; c) Les signatures texturales couleurs offrant des scores supérieurs à ceux obtenus avec les signatures grises de 5% à 10%; et ce avec des petites fenêtres de calcul (5*5, 7*7 et occasionnellement 9*9) d) Pour plusieurs classes d’occupation du sol prises individuellement, l’exactitude dépasse les 90% pour les deux types de signatures texturales; e) une seule classe est mieux séparable du reste par les textures grises, celle de l’agricole; f) les classes créant beaucoup de confusions, ce qui explique en grande partie le score global de la classification de 85%, sont les deux classes du résidentiel (haute et basse densité). En conclusion, nous pouvons dire que l’approche intégrative par textures couleurs d’une image multispectrale de 10 m de résolution spatiale offre un plus grand potentiel pour la cartographie des occupations du sol que l’approche intégrative par textures grises. Pour plusieurs classes d’occupations du sol un gain appréciable en temps de calcul des paramètres de texture peut être obtenu par l’utilisation des petites fenêtres de traitement. Des améliorations importantes sont escomptées pour atteindre des exactitudes de classification de 90% et plus par l’utilisation des fenêtres de calcul de taille variable adaptées à chaque type d’occupation du sol. Une méthode de classification hiérarchique pourrait être alors utilisée afin de séparer les classes recherchées une à la fois par rapport au reste au lieu d’une classification globale où l’intégration des paramètres calculés avec des fenêtres de taille variable conduirait inévitablement à des confusions entre classes.
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The computation of a piecewise smooth function that approximates a finite set of data points may be decomposed into two decoupled tasks: first, the computation of the locally smooth models, and hence, the segmentation of the data into classes that consist on the sets of points best approximated by each model, and second, the computation of the normalized discriminant functions for each induced class. The approximating function may then be computed as the optimal estimator with respect to this measure field. We give an efficient procedure for effecting both computations, and for the determination of the optimal number of components.
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In the context of real-valued functions defined on metric spaces, it is known that the locally Lipschitz functions are uniformly dense in the continuous functions and that the Lipschitz in the small functions - the locally Lipschitz functions where both the local Lipschitz constant and the size of the neighborhood can be chosen independent of the point - are uniformly dense in the uniformly continuous functions. Between these two basic classes of continuous functions lies the class of Cauchy continuous functions, i.e., the functions that map Cauchy sequences in the domain to Cauchy sequences in the target space. Here, we exhibit an intermediate class of Cauchy continuous locally Lipschitz functions that is uniformly dense in the real-valued Cauchy continuous functions. In fact, our result is valid when our target space is an arbitrary Banach space.
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Diffusion equations that use time fractional derivatives are attractive because they describe a wealth of problems involving non-Markovian Random walks. The time fractional diffusion equation (TFDE) is obtained from the standard diffusion equation by replacing the first-order time derivative with a fractional derivative of order α ∈ (0, 1). Developing numerical methods for solving fractional partial differential equations is a new research field and the theoretical analysis of the numerical methods associated with them is not fully developed. In this paper an explicit conservative difference approximation (ECDA) for TFDE is proposed. We give a detailed analysis for this ECDA and generate discrete models of random walk suitable for simulating random variables whose spatial probability density evolves in time according to this fractional diffusion equation. The stability and convergence of the ECDA for TFDE in a bounded domain are discussed. Finally, some numerical examples are presented to show the application of the present technique.
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In this paper, we consider a time fractional diffusion equation on a finite domain. The equation is obtained from the standard diffusion equation by replacing the first-order time derivative by a fractional derivative (of order $0<\alpha<1$ ). We propose a computationally effective implicit difference approximation to solve the time fractional diffusion equation. Stability and convergence of the method are discussed. We prove that the implicit difference approximation (IDA) is unconditionally stable, and the IDA is convergent with $O(\tau+h^2)$, where $\tau$ and $h$ are time and space steps, respectively. Some numerical examples are presented to show the application of the present technique.
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In this paper, a space fractional di®usion equation (SFDE) with non- homogeneous boundary conditions on a bounded domain is considered. A new matrix transfer technique (MTT) for solving the SFDE is proposed. The method is based on a matrix representation of the fractional-in-space operator and the novelty of this approach is that a standard discretisation of the operator leads to a system of linear ODEs with the matrix raised to the same fractional power. Analytic solutions of the SFDE are derived. Finally, some numerical results are given to demonstrate that the MTT is a computationally e±cient and accurate method for solving SFDE.
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Aijt-Sahalia (2002) introduced a method to estimate transitional probability densities of di®usion processes by means of Hermite expansions with coe±cients determined by means of Taylor series. This note describes a numerical procedure to ¯nd these coe±cients based on the calculation of moments. One advantage of this procedure is that it can be used e®ectively when the mathematical operations required to ¯nd closed-form expressions for these coe±cients are otherwise infeasible.