• DocumentCode
    1538260
  • Title

    Optimal algorithms for the multiple query problem on reconfigurable meshes, with applications

  • Author

    Bokka, Venkatavasu ; Nakano, Koji ; Olariu, Stephen ; Schwing, James L. ; Wilson, Larry

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Comput. Sci., Old Dominion Univ., Norfolk, VA, USA
  • Volume
    12
  • Issue
    9
  • fYear
    2001
  • fDate
    9/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    875
  • Lastpage
    887
  • Abstract
    The main contribution of this work is to show that a number of fundamental and seemingly unrelated problems in database design, pattern recognition, robotics, computational geometry, and image processing can be solved simply and elegantly by stating them as instances of a unifying algorithmic framework that we call the multiple query problem. The multiple query problem (MQ, for short) is a 5-tuple (Q, A, D, φ, ⊕), where Q is a set of queries, A is a set of items, D is a set of solutions, φ: Q×A→D is a function, and ⊕ is a commutative and associative binary operator over D. The input to the MQ problem consists of a sequence Q=⟨q1,q2…,qm⟩ of m queries from Q and of a sequence A=⟨a1,a2,…an⟩ of n items from A. The goal is to compute, for every query qi (1⩽i⩽m) its solution defined as φ(qi,A)=φ(q i,a1)⊕φ(qi,a2 )⊕···⊕φ(qi,an ). We begin by discussing a generic algorithm that solves a large class of MQ problems in O(√m+f(n)) time on a reconfigurable mesh of size √n×√n, where f(n) is the time necessary to compute the expression d1 ⊕ d2 ⊕···⊕ dn with di ∈ D on such a platform. We then go on to show that the MQ framework affords us an optimal algorithm for the multiple point location problem on a reconfigurable mesh of size √n×√n. Given a set A of n points and a set Q of m (m⩽n) points in the plane, our algorithm reports, in O(√m+log log n) time, all points of Q that lie inside the convex hull of A. Quite surprisingly, our algorithm solves the multiple point location problem without computing the convex hull of A which, in itself, takes Ω(√n) time on a reconfigurable mesh of size √n×√n. Finally, we prove an Ω(√m+g(n)) time lower bound for nontrivial MQ problems, where g(n) is the lower bound for evaluating the expression d1 ⊕ d2 ⊕···⊕ dn with di ∈ D, on a reconfigurable mesh of size √n×√n
  • Keywords
    computational geometry; database management systems; image processing; parallel algorithms; pattern recognition; query processing; reconfigurable architectures; associative binary operator; computational geometry; convex hull; database design; generic algorithm; image processing; lower bound; multiple point location problem; multiple query problem; optimal algorithm; optimal algorithms; pattern recognition; reconfigurable mesh; reconfigurable meshes; robotics; unifying algorithmic framework; Algorithm design and analysis; Application software; Computational geometry; Computer Society; Computer vision; Image databases; Image processing; Navigation; Pattern recognition; Spatial databases;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Parallel and Distributed Systems, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1045-9219
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/71.954618
  • Filename
    954618