@article{1222, abstract = {We consider packings of congruent circles on a square flat torus, i.e., periodic (w.r.t. a square lattice) planar circle packings, with the maximal circle radius. This problem is interesting due to a practical reason—the problem of “super resolution of images.” We have found optimal arrangements for N=6, 7 and 8 circles. Surprisingly, for the case N=7 there are three different optimal arrangements. Our proof is based on a computer enumeration of toroidal irreducible contact graphs.}, author = {Musin, Oleg and Nikitenko, Anton}, journal = {Discrete & Computational Geometry}, number = {1}, pages = {1 -- 20}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Optimal packings of congruent circles on a square flat torus}}, doi = {10.1007/s00454-015-9742-6}, volume = {55}, year = {2016}, } @inproceedings{1237, abstract = {Bitmap images of arbitrary dimension may be formally perceived as unions of m-dimensional boxes aligned with respect to a rectangular grid in ℝm. Cohomology and homology groups are well known topological invariants of such sets. Cohomological operations, such as the cup product, provide higher-order algebraic topological invariants, especially important for digital images of dimension higher than 3. If such an operation is determined at the level of simplicial chains [see e.g. González-Díaz, Real, Homology, Homotopy Appl, 2003, 83-93], then it is effectively computable. However, decomposing a cubical complex into a simplicial one deleteriously affects the efficiency of such an approach. In order to avoid this overhead, a direct cubical approach was applied in [Pilarczyk, Real, Adv. Comput. Math., 2015, 253-275] for the cup product in cohomology, and implemented in the ChainCon software package [http://www.pawelpilarczyk.com/chaincon/]. We establish a formula for the Steenrod square operations [see Steenrod, Annals of Mathematics. Second Series, 1947, 290-320] directly at the level of cubical chains, and we prove the correctness of this formula. An implementation of this formula is programmed in C++ within the ChainCon software framework. We provide a few examples and discuss the effectiveness of this approach. One specific application follows from the fact that Steenrod squares yield tests for the topological extension problem: Can a given map A → Sd to a sphere Sd be extended to a given super-complex X of A? In particular, the ROB-SAT problem, which is to decide for a given function f: X → ℝm and a value r > 0 whether every g: X → ℝm with ∥g - f ∥∞ ≤ r has a root, reduces to the extension problem.}, author = {Krcál, Marek and Pilarczyk, Pawel}, location = {Marseille, France}, pages = {140 -- 151}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Computation of cubical Steenrod squares}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-39441-1_13}, volume = {9667}, year = {2016}, } @article{1252, abstract = {We study the homomorphism induced in homology by a closed correspondence between topological spaces, using projections from the graph of the correspondence to its domain and codomain. We provide assumptions under which the homomorphism induced by an outer approximation of a continuous map coincides with the homomorphism induced in homology by the map. In contrast to more classical results we do not require that the projection to the domain have acyclic preimages. Moreover, we show that it is possible to retrieve correct homological information from a correspondence even if some data is missing or perturbed. Finally, we describe an application to combinatorial maps that are either outer approximations of continuous maps or reconstructions of such maps from a finite set of data points.}, author = {Harker, Shaun and Kokubu, Hiroshi and Mischaikow, Konstantin and Pilarczyk, Pawel}, issn = {1088-6826}, journal = {Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society}, number = {4}, pages = {1787 -- 1801}, publisher = {American Mathematical Society}, title = {{Inducing a map on homology from a correspondence}}, doi = {10.1090/proc/12812}, volume = {144}, year = {2016}, } @article{1254, abstract = {We use rigorous numerical techniques to compute a lower bound for the exponent of expansivity outside a neighborhood of the critical point for thousands of intervals of parameter values in the quadratic family. We first compute a radius of the critical neighborhood outside which the map is uniformly expanding. This radius is taken as small as possible, yet large enough for our numerical procedure to succeed in proving that the expansivity exponent outside this neighborhood is positive. Then, for each of the intervals, we compute a lower bound for this expansivity exponent, valid for all the parameters in that interval. We illustrate and study the distribution of the radii and the expansivity exponents. The results of our computations are mathematically rigorous. The source code of the software and the results of the computations are made publicly available at http://www.pawelpilarczyk.com/quadratic/.}, author = {Golmakani, Ali and Luzzatto, Stefano and Pilarczyk, Pawel}, journal = {Experimental Mathematics}, number = {2}, pages = {116 -- 124}, publisher = {Taylor and Francis}, title = {{Uniform expansivity outside a critical neighborhood in the quadratic family}}, doi = {10.1080/10586458.2015.1048011}, volume = {25}, year = {2016}, } @article{1272, abstract = {We study different means to extend offsetting based on skeletal structures beyond the well-known constant-radius and mitered offsets supported by Voronoi diagrams and straight skeletons, for which the orthogonal distance of offset elements to their respective input elements is constant and uniform over all input elements. Our main contribution is a new geometric structure, called variable-radius Voronoi diagram, which supports the computation of variable-radius offsets, i.e., offsets whose distance to the input is allowed to vary along the input. We discuss properties of this structure and sketch a prototype implementation that supports the computation of variable-radius offsets based on this new variant of Voronoi diagrams.}, author = {Held, Martin and Huber, Stefan and Palfrader, Peter}, journal = {Computer-Aided Design and Applications}, number = {5}, pages = {712 -- 721}, publisher = {Taylor and Francis}, title = {{Generalized offsetting of planar structures using skeletons}}, doi = {10.1080/16864360.2016.1150718}, volume = {13}, year = {2016}, } @article{1295, abstract = {Voronoi diagrams and Delaunay triangulations have been extensively used to represent and compute geometric features of point configurations. We introduce a generalization to poset diagrams and poset complexes, which contain order-k and degree-k Voronoi diagrams and their duals as special cases. Extending a result of Aurenhammer from 1990, we show how to construct poset diagrams as weighted Voronoi diagrams of average balls.}, author = {Edelsbrunner, Herbert and Iglesias Ham, Mabel}, journal = {Electronic Notes in Discrete Mathematics}, pages = {169 -- 174}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Multiple covers with balls II: Weighted averages}}, doi = {10.1016/j.endm.2016.09.030}, volume = {54}, year = {2016}, } @article{1292, abstract = {We give explicit formulas and algorithms for the computation of the Thurston–Bennequin invariant of a nullhomologous Legendrian knot on a page of a contact open book and on Heegaard surfaces in convex position. Furthermore, we extend the results to rationally nullhomologous knots in arbitrary 3-manifolds.}, author = {Durst, Sebastian and Kegel, Marc and Klukas, Mirko D}, journal = {Acta Mathematica Hungarica}, number = {2}, pages = {441 -- 455}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Computing the Thurston–Bennequin invariant in open books}}, doi = {10.1007/s10474-016-0648-4}, volume = {150}, year = {2016}, } @article{1330, abstract = {In this paper we investigate the existence of closed billiard trajectories in not necessarily smooth convex bodies. In particular, we show that if a body K ⊂ Rd has the property that the tangent cone of every non-smooth point q ∉ ∂K is acute (in a certain sense), then there is a closed billiard trajectory in K.}, author = {Akopyan, Arseniy and Balitskiy, Alexey}, journal = {Israel Journal of Mathematics}, number = {2}, pages = {833 -- 845}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Billiards in convex bodies with acute angles}}, doi = {10.1007/s11856-016-1429-z}, volume = {216}, year = {2016}, } @article{1360, abstract = {We apply the technique of Károly Bezdek and Daniel Bezdek to study billiard trajectories in convex bodies, when the length is measured with a (possibly asymmetric) norm. We prove a lower bound for the length of the shortest closed billiard trajectory, related to the non-symmetric Mahler problem. With this technique we are able to give short and elementary proofs to some known results. }, author = {Akopyan, Arseniy and Balitskiy, Alexey and Karasev, Roman and Sharipova, Anastasia}, journal = {Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society}, number = {10}, pages = {4501 -- 4513}, publisher = {American Mathematical Society}, title = {{Elementary approach to closed billiard trajectories in asymmetric normed spaces}}, doi = {10.1090/proc/13062}, volume = {144}, year = {2016}, } @article{1408, abstract = {The concept of well group in a special but important case captures homological properties of the zero set of a continuous map (Formula presented.) on a compact space K that are invariant with respect to perturbations of f. The perturbations are arbitrary continuous maps within (Formula presented.) distance r from f for a given (Formula presented.). The main drawback of the approach is that the computability of well groups was shown only when (Formula presented.) or (Formula presented.). Our contribution to the theory of well groups is twofold: on the one hand we improve on the computability issue, but on the other hand we present a range of examples where the well groups are incomplete invariants, that is, fail to capture certain important robust properties of the zero set. For the first part, we identify a computable subgroup of the well group that is obtained by cap product with the pullback of the orientation of (Formula presented.) by f. In other words, well groups can be algorithmically approximated from below. When f is smooth and (Formula presented.), our approximation of the (Formula presented.)th well group is exact. For the second part, we find examples of maps (Formula presented.) with all well groups isomorphic but whose perturbations have different zero sets. We discuss on a possible replacement of the well groups of vector valued maps by an invariant of a better descriptive power and computability status.}, author = {Franek, Peter and Krcál, Marek}, journal = {Discrete & Computational Geometry}, number = {1}, pages = {126 -- 164}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{On computability and triviality of well groups}}, doi = {10.1007/s00454-016-9794-2}, volume = {56}, year = {2016}, } @article{1289, abstract = {Aiming at the automatic diagnosis of tumors using narrow band imaging (NBI) magnifying endoscopic (ME) images of the stomach, we combine methods from image processing, topology, geometry, and machine learning to classify patterns into three classes: oval, tubular and irregular. Training the algorithm on a small number of images of each type, we achieve a high rate of correct classifications. The analysis of the learning algorithm reveals that a handful of geometric and topological features are responsible for the overwhelming majority of decisions.}, author = {Dunaeva, Olga and Edelsbrunner, Herbert and Lukyanov, Anton and Machin, Michael and Malkova, Daria and Kuvaev, Roman and Kashin, Sergey}, journal = {Pattern Recognition Letters}, number = {1}, pages = {13 -- 22}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{The classification of endoscopy images with persistent homology}}, doi = {10.1016/j.patrec.2015.12.012}, volume = {83}, year = {2016}, } @article{1617, abstract = {We study the discrepancy of jittered sampling sets: such a set P⊂ [0,1]d is generated for fixed m∈ℕ by partitioning [0,1]d into md axis aligned cubes of equal measure and placing a random point inside each of the N=md cubes. We prove that, for N sufficiently large, 1/10 d/N1/2+1/2d ≤EDN∗(P)≤ √d(log N) 1/2/N1/2+1/2d, where the upper bound with an unspecified constant Cd was proven earlier by Beck. Our proof makes crucial use of the sharp Dvoretzky-Kiefer-Wolfowitz inequality and a suitably taylored Bernstein inequality; we have reasons to believe that the upper bound has the sharp scaling in N. Additional heuristics suggest that jittered sampling should be able to improve known bounds on the inverse of the star-discrepancy in the regime N≳dd. We also prove a partition principle showing that every partition of [0,1]d combined with a jittered sampling construction gives rise to a set whose expected squared L2-discrepancy is smaller than that of purely random points.}, author = {Pausinger, Florian and Steinerberger, Stefan}, journal = {Journal of Complexity}, pages = {199 -- 216}, publisher = {Academic Press}, title = {{On the discrepancy of jittered sampling}}, doi = {10.1016/j.jco.2015.11.003}, volume = {33}, year = {2016}, } @inproceedings{5806, abstract = {Although the concept of functional plane for naive plane is studied and reported in the literature in great detail, no similar study is yet found for naive sphere. This article exposes the first study in this line, opening up further prospects of analyzing the topological properties of sphere in the discrete space. We show that each quadraginta octant Q of a naive sphere forms a bijection with its projected pixel set on a unique coordinate plane, which thereby serves as the functional plane of Q, and hence gives rise to merely mono-jumps during back projection. The other two coordinate planes serve as para-functional and dia-functional planes for Q, as the former is ‘mono-jumping’ but not bijective, whereas the latter holds neither of the two. Owing to this, the quadraginta octants form symmetry groups and subgroups with equivalent jump conditions. We also show a potential application in generating a special class of discrete 3D circles based on back projection and jump bridging by Steiner voxels. A circle in this class possesses 4-symmetry, uniqueness, and bounded distance from the underlying real sphere and real plane.}, author = {Biswas, Ranita and Bhowmick, Partha}, booktitle = {Discrete Geometry for Computer Imagery}, isbn = {978-3-319-32359-6}, issn = {0302-9743}, location = {Nantes, France}, pages = {256--267}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{On functionality of quadraginta octants of naive sphere with application to circle drawing}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-32360-2_20}, volume = {9647}, year = {2016}, } @inbook{5805, abstract = {Discretization of sphere in the integer space follows a particular discretization scheme, which, in principle, conforms to some topological model. This eventually gives rise to interesting topological properties of a discrete spherical surface, which need to be investigated for its analytical characterization. This paper presents some novel results on the local topological properties of the naive model of discrete sphere. They follow from the bijection of each quadraginta octant of naive sphere with its projection map called f -map on the corresponding functional plane and from the characterization of certain jumps in the f-map. As an application, we have shown how these properties can be used in designing an efficient reconstruction algorithm for a naive spherical surface from an input voxel set when it is sparse or noisy.}, author = {Sen, Nabhasmita and Biswas, Ranita and Bhowmick, Partha}, booktitle = {Computational Topology in Image Context}, isbn = {978-3-319-39440-4}, issn = {1611-3349}, location = {Marseille, France}, pages = {253--264}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{On some local topological properties of naive discrete sphere}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-39441-1_23}, volume = {9667}, year = {2016}, } @inbook{5809, abstract = {A discrete spherical circle is a topologically well-connected 3D circle in the integer space, which belongs to a discrete sphere as well as a discrete plane. It is one of the most important 3D geometric primitives, but has not possibly yet been studied up to its merit. This paper is a maiden exposition of some of its elementary properties, which indicates a sense of its profound theoretical prospects in the framework of digital geometry. We have shown how different types of discretization can lead to forbidden and admissible classes, when one attempts to define the discretization of a spherical circle in terms of intersection between a discrete sphere and a discrete plane. Several fundamental theoretical results have been presented, the algorithm for construction of discrete spherical circles has been discussed, and some test results have been furnished to demonstrate its practicality and usefulness.}, author = {Biswas, Ranita and Bhowmick, Partha and Brimkov, Valentin E.}, booktitle = {Combinatorial image analysis}, isbn = {978-3-319-26144-7}, issn = {1611-3349}, location = {Kolkata, India}, pages = {86--100}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{On the connectivity and smoothness of discrete spherical circles}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-26145-4_7}, volume = {9448}, year = {2016}, } @article{1662, abstract = {We introduce a modification of the classic notion of intrinsic volume using persistence moments of height functions. Evaluating the modified first intrinsic volume on digital approximations of a compact body with smoothly embedded boundary in Rn, we prove convergence to the first intrinsic volume of the body as the resolution of the approximation improves. We have weaker results for the other modified intrinsic volumes, proving they converge to the corresponding intrinsic volumes of the n-dimensional unit ball.}, author = {Edelsbrunner, Herbert and Pausinger, Florian}, journal = {Advances in Mathematics}, pages = {674 -- 703}, publisher = {Academic Press}, title = {{Approximation and convergence of the intrinsic volume}}, doi = {10.1016/j.aim.2015.10.004}, volume = {287}, year = {2016}, } @inproceedings{1424, abstract = {We consider the problem of statistical computations with persistence diagrams, a summary representation of topological features in data. These diagrams encode persistent homology, a widely used invariant in topological data analysis. While several avenues towards a statistical treatment of the diagrams have been explored recently, we follow an alternative route that is motivated by the success of methods based on the embedding of probability measures into reproducing kernel Hilbert spaces. In fact, a positive definite kernel on persistence diagrams has recently been proposed, connecting persistent homology to popular kernel-based learning techniques such as support vector machines. However, important properties of that kernel enabling a principled use in the context of probability measure embeddings remain to be explored. Our contribution is to close this gap by proving universality of a variant of the original kernel, and to demonstrate its effective use in twosample hypothesis testing on synthetic as well as real-world data.}, author = {Kwitt, Roland and Huber, Stefan and Niethammer, Marc and Lin, Weili and Bauer, Ulrich}, location = {Montreal, Canada}, pages = {3070 -- 3078}, publisher = {Neural Information Processing Systems}, title = {{Statistical topological data analysis-A kernel perspective}}, volume = {28}, year = {2015}, } @inproceedings{1483, abstract = {Topological data analysis offers a rich source of valuable information to study vision problems. Yet, so far we lack a theoretically sound connection to popular kernel-based learning techniques, such as kernel SVMs or kernel PCA. In this work, we establish such a connection by designing a multi-scale kernel for persistence diagrams, a stable summary representation of topological features in data. We show that this kernel is positive definite and prove its stability with respect to the 1-Wasserstein distance. Experiments on two benchmark datasets for 3D shape classification/retrieval and texture recognition show considerable performance gains of the proposed method compared to an alternative approach that is based on the recently introduced persistence landscapes.}, author = {Reininghaus, Jan and Huber, Stefan and Bauer, Ulrich and Kwitt, Roland}, location = {Boston, MA, USA}, pages = {4741 -- 4748}, publisher = {IEEE}, title = {{A stable multi-scale kernel for topological machine learning}}, doi = {10.1109/CVPR.2015.7299106}, year = {2015}, } @inproceedings{1495, abstract = {Motivated by biological questions, we study configurations of equal-sized disks in the Euclidean plane that neither pack nor cover. Measuring the quality by the probability that a random point lies in exactly one disk, we show that the regular hexagonal grid gives the maximum among lattice configurations. }, author = {Edelsbrunner, Herbert and Iglesias Ham, Mabel and Kurlin, Vitaliy}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 27th Canadian Conference on Computational Geometry}, location = {Ontario, Canada}, pages = {128--135}, publisher = {Queen's University}, title = {{Relaxed disk packing}}, volume = {2015-August}, year = {2015}, } @inproceedings{1510, abstract = {The concept of well group in a special but important case captures homological properties of the zero set of a continuous map f from K to R^n on a compact space K that are invariant with respect to perturbations of f. The perturbations are arbitrary continuous maps within L_infty distance r from f for a given r > 0. The main drawback of the approach is that the computability of well groups was shown only when dim K = n or n = 1. Our contribution to the theory of well groups is twofold: on the one hand we improve on the computability issue, but on the other hand we present a range of examples where the well groups are incomplete invariants, that is, fail to capture certain important robust properties of the zero set. For the first part, we identify a computable subgroup of the well group that is obtained by cap product with the pullback of the orientation of R^n by f. In other words, well groups can be algorithmically approximated from below. When f is smooth and dim K < 2n-2, our approximation of the (dim K-n)th well group is exact. For the second part, we find examples of maps f, f' from K to R^n with all well groups isomorphic but whose perturbations have different zero sets. We discuss on a possible replacement of the well groups of vector valued maps by an invariant of a better descriptive power and computability status. }, author = {Franek, Peter and Krcál, Marek}, location = {Eindhoven, Netherlands}, pages = {842 -- 856}, publisher = {Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik}, title = {{On computability and triviality of well groups}}, doi = {10.4230/LIPIcs.SOCG.2015.842}, volume = {34}, year = {2015}, }