scholarly journals A Generic Method for Bijections between Blossoming Trees and Planar Maps

10.37236/3386 ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marie Albenque ◽  
Dominique Poulalhon

This article presents a unified bijective scheme between planar maps and blossoming trees, where a blossoming tree is defined as a spanning tree of the map decorated with some dangling half-edges that enable to reconstruct its faces. Our method generalizes a previous construction of Bernardi by loosening its conditions of application so as to include annular maps, that is maps embedded in the plane with a root face different from the outer face.The bijective construction presented here relies deeply on the theory of $\alpha$-orientations introduced by Felsner, and in particular on the existence of minimal and accessible orientations. Since most of the families of maps can be characterized by such orientations, our generic bijective method is proved to capture as special cases many previously known bijections involving blossoming trees: for example Eulerian maps, $m$-Eulerian maps, non-separable maps and simple triangulations and quadrangulations of a $k$-gon. Moreover, it also permits to obtain new bijective constructions for bipolar orientations and $d$-angulations of girth $d$ of a $k$-gon.As for applications, each specialization of the construction translates into enumerative by-products, either via a closed formula or via a recursive computational scheme. Besides, for every family of maps described in the paper, the construction can be implemented in linear time. It yields thus an effective way to encode or sample planar maps.In a recent work, Bernardi and Fusy introduced another unified bijective scheme; we adopt here a different strategy which allows us to capture different bijections. These two approaches should be seen as two complementary ways of unifying bijections between planar maps and decorated trees.

2005 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 195-222 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Harris ◽  
Morris Halle

We examine the puzzling displacement in various Spanish dialects of a plural suffix from a verb where it is motivated semantically, syntactically, and morphologically onto a following clitic. We present previously unreported data and a new analysis of this material that succeeds where earlier efforts fail to provide a unified account of related phenomena. Our solution, which employs recent work on reduplication and metathesis, allows us to account for seemingly disparate phenomena as special cases of a single general framework and demonstrates that these operations are more versatile than previously thought. Directions for future research are indicated.


2005 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sanguthevar Rajasekaran

Given a weighted graph G(V;E), a minimum spanning tree for G can be obtained in linear time using a randomized algorithm or nearly linear time using a deterministic algorithm. Given n points in the plane, we can construct a graph with these points as nodes and an edge between every pair of nodes. The weight on any edge is the Euclidean distance between the two points. Finding a minimum spanning tree for this graph is known as the Euclidean minimum spanning tree problem (EMSTP). The minimum spanning tree algorithms alluded to before will run in time O(n2) (or nearly O(n2)) on this graph. In this note we point out that it is possible to devise simple algorithms for EMSTP in k- dimensions (for any constant k) whose expected run time is O(n), under the assumption that the points are uniformly distributed in the space of interest.CR Categories: F2.2 Nonnumerical Algorithms and Problems; G.3 Probabilistic Algorithms


2015 ◽  
Vol 57 (2) ◽  
pp. 166-174 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. CHARKHGARD ◽  
M. SAVELSBERGH

We investigate two routing problems that arise when order pickers traverse an aisle in a warehouse. The routing problems can be viewed as Euclidean travelling salesman problems with points on two parallel lines. We show that if the order picker traverses only a section of the aisle and then returns, then an optimal solution can be found in linear time, and if the order picker traverses the entire aisle, then an optimal solution can be found in quadratic time. Moreover, we show how to approximate the routing cost in linear time by computing a minimum spanning tree for the points on the parallel lines.


1993 ◽  
Vol 01 (02) ◽  
pp. 159-186 ◽  
Author(s):  
ROGER V. JEAN

This article introduces a systemic theory of phyllotaxis (study of primordial patterns on plants) and updates a mathematical model which is central in the theory. The theory deals with the descriptive and the functional aspects of phyllotaxis, and studies the origins of patterns as well. The article concentrates on the formal aspects of the model and on its explanatory values. The model possesses biological foundations which will not be recalled here. It supposes a principle of optimal design and the representation of phyllotactic patterns with control hierarchies. These hierarchies can be generated with irreducible matrices and L-systems. In the hierarchies, parameters can be identified representing important characteristics of growth that is complexity, stability and rhythm. A formula linking those parameters allows us to calculate the numerical cost of each one of the phyllotactic patterns and to order the costs. The various types of patterns come out, including whorled patterns which are seen as special cases of spiral patterns. The model proposes predictions which can be compared to observations. It predicts the existence of improbable patterns which have been later identified and it possesses explanatory values which have been interestingly put to contribution in difficult problems of pattern recognition in botany. It also possesses mathematical by-products in the theory of growth functions of L-systems, thus related to Perron-Frobenius spectral theory.


Author(s):  
Mary B. Trubitt

Arkansas novaculite, outcropping in the Ouachita Mountains of Arkansas and Oklahoma, has been an important regional lithic resource for thousands of years. Because of the stone’s durability, by-products of past novaculite procurement and tool production and use activities litter the landscape in southwest Arkansas. Recent work situates novaculite quarries in the broader context of tool production and exchange systems. This article focuses on the organization of tool production, and explores analytical techniques that can be used to identify spatial separation of the lithic reduction process between quarry, workshop, and habitation sites.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
pp. 339-350
Author(s):  
Xian Qian ◽  
Yang Liu

We show that the decoding problem in generalized Higher Order Conditional Random Fields (CRFs) can be decomposed into two parts: one is a tree labeling problem that can be solved in linear time using dynamic programming; the other is a supermodular quadratic pseudo-Boolean maximization problem, which can be solved in cubic time using a minimum cut algorithm. We use dual decomposition to force their agreement. Experimental results on Twitter named entity recognition and sentence dependency tagging tasks show that our method outperforms spanning tree based dual decomposition.


Complexity ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Lixin Gao ◽  
Hui Fang ◽  
Wenhai Chen ◽  
He Cao

In this paper, the concept of consensus is generalized to weighted consensus, by which the conventional consensus, the bipartite consensus, and the cluster consensus problems can be unified in the proposed weighted consensus frame. The dynamics of agents are modeled by the general linear time-invariant systems. The interaction topology is modeled by edge- and node-weighted directed graphs. Under both state feedback and output feedback control strategies, the weighted consensus problems are transformed into the equivalent conventional consensus problems. Then, some distributed state feedback and output feedback protocols are proposed to solve the weighted consensus problems. For output feedback case, a unified frame to construct the state-observer-based weighted consensus protocols is proposed, and different design approaches are discussed. As special cases, some related results for bipartite consensus and cluster consensus can be obtained directly. Finally, a simple example is given to illustrate the effectiveness of our proposed approaches.


1996 ◽  
Vol 06 (03) ◽  
pp. 263-278 ◽  
Author(s):  
ROLF KLEIN ◽  
ANDRZEJ LINGAS

For a polygon P, the bounded Voronoi diagram of P is a partition of P into regions assigned to the vertices of P. A point p inside P belongs to the region of a vertex v if and only if v is the closest vertex of P visible from p. We present a randomized algorithm that builds the bounded Voronoi diagram of a simple polygon in linear expected time. Among other applications, we can construct within the same time bound the generalized Delaunay triangulation of P and the minimal spanning tree on P’s vertices that is contained in P.


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