@article{1578, abstract = {We prove that the dual of the digital Voronoi diagram constructed by flooding the plane from the data points gives a geometrically and topologically correct dual triangulation. This provides the proof of correctness for recently developed GPU algorithms that outperform traditional CPU algorithms for constructing two-dimensional Delaunay triangulations.}, author = {Cao, Thanhtung and Edelsbrunner, Herbert and Tan, Tiowseng}, journal = {Computational Geometry}, number = {7}, pages = {507 -- 519}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Triangulations from topologically correct digital Voronoi diagrams}}, doi = {10.1016/j.comgeo.2015.04.001}, volume = {48}, year = {2015}, } @article{1584, abstract = {We investigate weighted straight skeletons from a geometric, graph-theoretical, and combinatorial point of view. We start with a thorough definition and shed light on some ambiguity issues in the procedural definition. We investigate the geometry, combinatorics, and topology of faces and the roof model, and we discuss in which cases a weighted straight skeleton is connected. Finally, we show that the weighted straight skeleton of even a simple polygon may be non-planar and may contain cycles, and we discuss under which restrictions on the weights and/or the input polygon the weighted straight skeleton still behaves similar to its unweighted counterpart. In particular, we obtain a non-procedural description and a linear-time construction algorithm for the straight skeleton of strictly convex polygons with arbitrary weights.}, author = {Biedl, Therese and Held, Martin and Huber, Stefan and Kaaser, Dominik and Palfrader, Peter}, journal = {Computational Geometry: Theory and Applications}, number = {5}, pages = {429 -- 442}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Reprint of: Weighted straight skeletons in the plane}}, doi = {10.1016/j.comgeo.2015.01.004}, volume = {48}, year = {2015}, } @article{1582, abstract = {We investigate weighted straight skeletons from a geometric, graph-theoretical, and combinatorial point of view. We start with a thorough definition and shed light on some ambiguity issues in the procedural definition. We investigate the geometry, combinatorics, and topology of faces and the roof model, and we discuss in which cases a weighted straight skeleton is connected. Finally, we show that the weighted straight skeleton of even a simple polygon may be non-planar and may contain cycles, and we discuss under which restrictions on the weights and/or the input polygon the weighted straight skeleton still behaves similar to its unweighted counterpart. In particular, we obtain a non-procedural description and a linear-time construction algorithm for the straight skeleton of strictly convex polygons with arbitrary weights.}, author = {Biedl, Therese and Held, Martin and Huber, Stefan and Kaaser, Dominik and Palfrader, Peter}, journal = {Computational Geometry: Theory and Applications}, number = {2}, pages = {120 -- 133}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Weighted straight skeletons in the plane}}, doi = {10.1016/j.comgeo.2014.08.006}, volume = {48}, year = {2015}, } @article{1583, abstract = {We study the characteristics of straight skeletons of monotone polygonal chains and use them to devise an algorithm for computing positively weighted straight skeletons of monotone polygons. Our algorithm runs in O(nlogn) time and O(n) space, where n denotes the number of vertices of the polygon.}, author = {Biedl, Therese and Held, Martin and Huber, Stefan and Kaaser, Dominik and Palfrader, Peter}, journal = {Information Processing Letters}, number = {2}, pages = {243 -- 247}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{A simple algorithm for computing positively weighted straight skeletons of monotone polygons}}, doi = {10.1016/j.ipl.2014.09.021}, volume = {115}, year = {2015}, } @inbook{1590, abstract = {The straight skeleton of a polygon is the geometric graph obtained by tracing the vertices during a mitered offsetting process. It is known that the straight skeleton of a simple polygon is a tree, and one can naturally derive directions on the edges of the tree from the propagation of the shrinking process. In this paper, we ask the reverse question: Given a tree with directed edges, can it be the straight skeleton of a polygon? And if so, can we find a suitable simple polygon? We answer these questions for all directed trees where the order of edges around each node is fixed.}, author = {Aichholzer, Oswin and Biedl, Therese and Hackl, Thomas and Held, Martin and Huber, Stefan and Palfrader, Peter and Vogtenhuber, Birgit}, booktitle = {Graph Drawing and Network Visualization}, isbn = {978-3-319-27260-3}, location = {Los Angeles, CA, United States}, pages = {335 -- 347}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Representing directed trees as straight skeletons}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-27261-0_28}, volume = {9411}, year = {2015}, } @article{1682, abstract = {We study the problem of robust satisfiability of systems of nonlinear equations, namely, whether for a given continuous function f:K→ ℝn on a finite simplicial complex K and α > 0, it holds that each function g: K → ℝn such that ||g - f || ∞ < α, has a root in K. Via a reduction to the extension problem of maps into a sphere, we particularly show that this problem is decidable in polynomial time for every fixed n, assuming dimK ≤ 2n - 3. This is a substantial extension of previous computational applications of topological degree and related concepts in numerical and interval analysis. Via a reverse reduction, we prove that the problem is undecidable when dim K > 2n - 2, where the threshold comes from the stable range in homotopy theory. For the lucidity of our exposition, we focus on the setting when f is simplexwise linear. Such functions can approximate general continuous functions, and thus we get approximation schemes and undecidability of the robust satisfiability in other possible settings.}, author = {Franek, Peter and Krcál, Marek}, journal = {Journal of the ACM}, number = {4}, publisher = {ACM}, title = {{Robust satisfiability of systems of equations}}, doi = {10.1145/2751524}, volume = {62}, year = {2015}, } @article{1710, abstract = {We consider the hollow on the half-plane {(x, y) : y ≤ 0} ⊂ ℝ2 defined by a function u : (-1, 1) → ℝ, u(x) < 0, and a vertical flow of point particles incident on the hollow. It is assumed that u satisfies the so-called single impact condition (SIC): each incident particle is elastically reflected by graph(u) and goes away without hitting the graph of u anymore. We solve the problem: find the function u minimizing the force of resistance created by the flow. We show that the graph of the minimizer is formed by two arcs of parabolas symmetric to each other with respect to the y-axis. Assuming that the resistance of u ≡ 0 equals 1, we show that the minimal resistance equals π/2 - 2arctan(1/2) ≈ 0.6435. This result completes the previously obtained result [SIAM J. Math. Anal., 46 (2014), pp. 2730-2742] stating in particular that the minimal resistance of a hollow in higher dimensions equals 0.5. We additionally consider a similar problem of minimal resistance, where the hollow in the half-space {(x1,...,xd,y) : y ≤ 0} ⊂ ℝd+1 is defined by a radial function U satisfying the SIC, U(x) = u(|x|), with x = (x1,...,xd), u(ξ) < 0 for 0 ≤ ξ < 1, and u(ξ) = 0 for ξ ≥ 1, and the flow is parallel to the y-axis. The minimal resistance is greater than 0.5 (and coincides with 0.6435 when d = 1) and converges to 0.5 as d → ∞.}, author = {Akopyan, Arseniy and Plakhov, Alexander}, journal = {Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics}, number = {4}, pages = {2754 -- 2769}, publisher = {SIAM}, title = {{Minimal resistance of curves under the single impact assumption}}, doi = {10.1137/140993843}, volume = {47}, year = {2015}, } @article{1828, abstract = {We construct a non-linear Markov process connected with a biological model of a bacterial genome recombination. The description of invariant measures of this process gives us the solution of one problem in elementary probability theory.}, author = {Akopyan, Arseniy and Pirogov, Sergey and Rybko, Aleksandr}, journal = {Journal of Statistical Physics}, number = {1}, pages = {163 -- 167}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Invariant measures of genetic recombination process}}, doi = {10.1007/s10955-015-1238-5}, volume = {160}, year = {2015}, } @article{1938, abstract = {We numerically investigate the distribution of extrema of 'chaotic' Laplacian eigenfunctions on two-dimensional manifolds. Our contribution is two-fold: (a) we count extrema on grid graphs with a small number of randomly added edges and show the behavior to coincide with the 1957 prediction of Longuet-Higgins for the continuous case and (b) we compute the regularity of their spatial distribution using discrepancy, which is a classical measure from the theory of Monte Carlo integration. The first part suggests that grid graphs with randomly added edges should behave like two-dimensional surfaces with ergodic geodesic flow; in the second part we show that the extrema are more regularly distributed in space than the grid Z2.}, author = {Pausinger, Florian and Steinerberger, Stefan}, journal = {Physics Letters, Section A}, number = {6}, pages = {535 -- 541}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{On the distribution of local extrema in quantum chaos}}, doi = {10.1016/j.physleta.2014.12.010}, volume = {379}, year = {2015}, } @article{2035, abstract = {Considering a continuous self-map and the induced endomorphism on homology, we study the eigenvalues and eigenspaces of the latter. Taking a filtration of representations, we define the persistence of the eigenspaces, effectively introducing a hierarchical organization of the map. The algorithm that computes this information for a finite sample is proved to be stable, and to give the correct answer for a sufficiently dense sample. Results computed with an implementation of the algorithm provide evidence of its practical utility. }, author = {Edelsbrunner, Herbert and Jablonski, Grzegorz and Mrozek, Marian}, journal = {Foundations of Computational Mathematics}, number = {5}, pages = {1213 -- 1244}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{The persistent homology of a self-map}}, doi = {10.1007/s10208-014-9223-y}, volume = {15}, year = {2015}, } @article{1805, abstract = {We consider the problem of deciding whether the persistent homology group of a simplicial pair (K,L) can be realized as the homology H∗(X) of some complex X with L ⊂ X ⊂ K. We show that this problem is NP-complete even if K is embedded in double-struck R3. As a consequence, we show that it is NP-hard to simplify level and sublevel sets of scalar functions on double-struck S3 within a given tolerance constraint. This problem has relevance to the visualization of medical images by isosurfaces. We also show an implication to the theory of well groups of scalar functions: not every well group can be realized by some level set, and deciding whether a well group can be realized is NP-hard.}, author = {Attali, Dominique and Bauer, Ulrich and Devillers, Olivier and Glisse, Marc and Lieutier, André}, journal = {Computational Geometry: Theory and Applications}, number = {8}, pages = {606 -- 621}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Homological reconstruction and simplification in R3}}, doi = {10.1016/j.comgeo.2014.08.010}, volume = {48}, year = {2015}, } @article{1793, abstract = {We present a software platform for reconstructing and analyzing the growth of a plant root system from a time-series of 3D voxelized shapes. It aligns the shapes with each other, constructs a geometric graph representation together with the function that records the time of growth, and organizes the branches into a hierarchy that reflects the order of creation. The software includes the automatic computation of structural and dynamic traits for each root in the system enabling the quantification of growth on fine-scale. These are important advances in plant phenotyping with applications to the study of genetic and environmental influences on growth.}, author = {Symonova, Olga and Topp, Christopher and Edelsbrunner, Herbert}, journal = {PLoS One}, number = {6}, publisher = {Public Library of Science}, title = {{DynamicRoots: A software platform for the reconstruction and analysis of growing plant roots}}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0127657}, volume = {10}, year = {2015}, } @misc{9737, author = {Symonova, Olga and Topp, Christopher and Edelsbrunner, Herbert}, publisher = {Public Library of Science}, title = {{Root traits computed by DynamicRoots for the maize root shown in fig 2}}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0127657.s001}, year = {2015}, } @article{1792, abstract = {Motivated by recent ideas of Harman (Unif. Distrib. Theory, 2010) we develop a new concept of variation of multivariate functions on a compact Hausdorff space with respect to a collection D of subsets. We prove a general version of the Koksma-Hlawka theorem that holds for this notion of variation and discrepancy with respect to D. As special cases, we obtain Koksma-Hlawka inequalities for classical notions, such as extreme or isotropic discrepancy. For extreme discrepancy, our result coincides with the usual Koksma-Hlawka theorem. We show that the space of functions of bounded D-variation contains important discontinuous functions and is closed under natural algebraic operations. Finally, we illustrate the results on concrete integration problems from integral geometry and stereology.}, author = {Pausinger, Florian and Svane, Anne}, journal = {Journal of Complexity}, number = {6}, pages = {773 -- 797}, publisher = {Academic Press}, title = {{A Koksma-Hlawka inequality for general discrepancy systems}}, doi = {10.1016/j.jco.2015.06.002}, volume = {31}, year = {2015}, } @phdthesis{1399, abstract = {This thesis is concerned with the computation and approximation of intrinsic volumes. Given a smooth body M and a certain digital approximation of it, we develop algorithms to approximate various intrinsic volumes of M using only measurements taken from its digital approximations. The crucial idea behind our novel algorithms is to link the recent theory of persistent homology to the theory of intrinsic volumes via the Crofton formula from integral geometry and, in particular, via Euler characteristic computations. Our main contributions are a multigrid convergent digital algorithm to compute the first intrinsic volume of a solid body in R^n as well as an appropriate integration pipeline to approximate integral-geometric integrals defined over the Grassmannian manifold.}, author = {Pausinger, Florian}, issn = {2663-337X}, pages = {144}, publisher = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria}, title = {{On the approximation of intrinsic volumes}}, year = {2015}, } @inbook{10893, abstract = {Saddle periodic orbits are an essential and stable part of the topological skeleton of a 3D vector field. Nevertheless, there is currently no efficient algorithm to robustly extract these features. In this chapter, we present a novel technique to extract saddle periodic orbits. Exploiting the analytic properties of such an orbit, we propose a scalar measure based on the finite-time Lyapunov exponent (FTLE) that indicates its presence. Using persistent homology, we can then extract the robust cycles of this field. These cycles thereby represent the saddle periodic orbits of the given vector field. We discuss the different existing FTLE approximation schemes regarding their applicability to this specific problem and propose an adapted version of FTLE called Normalized Velocity Separation. Finally, we evaluate our method using simple analytic vector field data.}, author = {Kasten, Jens and Reininghaus, Jan and Reich, Wieland and Scheuermann, Gerik}, booktitle = {Topological Methods in Data Analysis and Visualization III }, editor = {Bremer, Peer-Timo and Hotz, Ingrid and Pascucci, Valerio and Peikert, Ronald}, isbn = {9783319040981}, issn = {2197-666X}, pages = {55--69}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Toward the extraction of saddle periodic orbits}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-04099-8_4}, volume = {1}, year = {2014}, } @article{1816, abstract = {Watermarking techniques for vector graphics dislocate vertices in order to embed imperceptible, yet detectable, statistical features into the input data. The embedding process may result in a change of the topology of the input data, e.g., by introducing self-intersections, which is undesirable or even disastrous for many applications. In this paper we present a watermarking framework for two-dimensional vector graphics that employs conventional watermarking techniques but still provides the guarantee that the topology of the input data is preserved. The geometric part of this framework computes so-called maximum perturbation regions (MPR) of vertices. We propose two efficient algorithms to compute MPRs based on Voronoi diagrams and constrained triangulations. Furthermore, we present two algorithms to conditionally correct the watermarked data in order to increase the watermark embedding capacity and still guarantee topological correctness. While we focus on the watermarking of input formed by straight-line segments, one of our approaches can also be extended to circular arcs. We conclude the paper by demonstrating and analyzing the applicability of our framework in conjunction with two well-known watermarking techniques.}, author = {Huber, Stefan and Held, Martin and Meerwald, Peter and Kwitt, Roland}, journal = {International Journal of Computational Geometry and Applications}, number = {1}, pages = {61 -- 86}, publisher = {World Scientific Publishing}, title = {{Topology-preserving watermarking of vector graphics}}, doi = {10.1142/S0218195914500034}, volume = {24}, year = {2014}, } @article{1842, abstract = {We prove polynomial upper bounds of geometric Ramsey numbers of pathwidth-2 outerplanar triangulations in both convex and general cases. We also prove that the geometric Ramsey numbers of the ladder graph on 2n vertices are bounded by O(n3) and O(n10), in the convex and general case, respectively. We then apply similar methods to prove an (Formula presented.) upper bound on the Ramsey number of a path with n ordered vertices.}, author = {Cibulka, Josef and Gao, Pu and Krcál, Marek and Valla, Tomáš and Valtr, Pavel}, journal = {Discrete & Computational Geometry}, number = {1}, pages = {64 -- 79}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{On the geometric ramsey number of outerplanar graphs}}, doi = {10.1007/s00454-014-9646-x}, volume = {53}, year = {2014}, } @article{1876, abstract = {We study densities of functionals over uniformly bounded triangulations of a Delaunay set of vertices, and prove that the minimum is attained for the Delaunay triangulation if this is the case for finite sets.}, author = {Dolbilin, Nikolai and Edelsbrunner, Herbert and Glazyrin, Alexey and Musin, Oleg}, issn = {16093321}, journal = {Moscow Mathematical Journal}, number = {3}, pages = {491 -- 504}, publisher = {Independent University of Moscow}, title = {{Functionals on triangulations of delaunay sets}}, doi = {10.17323/1609-4514-2014-14-3-491-504}, volume = {14}, year = {2014}, } @article{1929, abstract = {We propose an algorithm for the generalization of cartographic objects that can be used to represent maps on different scales.}, author = {Alexeev, V V and Bogaevskaya, V G and Preobrazhenskaya, M M and Ukhalov, A Y and Edelsbrunner, Herbert and Yakimova, Olga}, issn = {1573-8795}, journal = {Journal of Mathematical Sciences}, number = {6}, pages = {754 -- 760}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{An algorithm for cartographic generalization that preserves global topology}}, doi = {10.1007/s10958-014-2165-8}, volume = {203}, year = {2014}, }