English

Dynamic Dynamic Time Warping

Computational Geometry 2023-11-14 v3

Abstract

The Dynamic Time Warping (DTW) distance is a popular similarity measure for polygonal curves (i.e., sequences of points). It finds many theoretical and practical applications, especially for temporal data, and is known to be a robust, outlier-insensitive alternative to the \frechet distance. For static curves of at most nn points, the DTW distance can be computed in O(n2)O(n^2) time in constant dimension. This tightly matches a SETH-based lower bound, even for curves in R1\mathbb{R}^1. In this work, we study \emph{dynamic} algorithms for the DTW distance. Here, the goal is to design a data structure that can be efficiently updated to accommodate local changes to one or both curves, such as inserting or deleting vertices and, after each operation, reports the updated DTW distance. We give such a data structure with update and query time O(n1.5logn)O(n^{1.5} \log n), where nn is the maximum length of the curves. As our main result, we prove that our data structure is conditionally \emph{optimal}, up to subpolynomial factors. More precisely, we prove that, already for curves in R1\mathbb{R}^1, there is no dynamic algorithm to maintain the DTW distance with update and query time~\makebox{O(n1.5δ)O(n^{1.5 - \delta})} for any constant δ>0\delta > 0, unless the Negative-kk-Clique Hypothesis fails. In fact, we give matching upper and lower bounds for various trade-offs between update and query time, even in cases where the lengths of the curves differ.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2310.18128,
  title  = {Dynamic Dynamic Time Warping},
  author = {Karl Bringmann and Nick Fischer and Ivor van der Hoog and Evangelos Kipouridis and Tomasz Kociumaka and Eva Rotenberg},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2310.18128},
  year   = {2023}
}

Comments

To appear at SODA24