Tracking Evolving labels using Cone based Oracles
Abstract
The evolving data framework was first proposed by Anagnostopoulos et al., where an evolver makes small changes to a structure behind the scenes. Instead of taking a single input and producing a single output, an algorithm judiciously probes the current state of the structure and attempts to continuously maintain a sketch of the structure that is as close as possible to its actual state. There have been a number of problems that have been studied in the evolving framework including our own work on labeled trees. We were motivated by the problem of maintaining a labeling in the plane, where updating the labels require physically moving them. Applications involve tracking evolving disease hot-spots via mobile testing units , and tracking unmanned aerial vehicles. To be specific, we consider the problem of tracking labeled nodes in the plane, where an evolver continuously swaps labels of any two nearby nodes in the background unknown to us. We are tasked with maintaining a hypothesis, an approximate sketch of the locations of these labels, which we can only update by physically moving them over a sparse graph. We assume the existence of an Oracle, which when suitably probed, guides us in fixing our hypothesis.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2306.03306,
title = {Tracking Evolving labels using Cone based Oracles},
author = {Aditya Acharya and David Mount},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2306.03306},
year = {2023}
}
Comments
This is an abstract of a presentation given at CG:YRF 2023. It has been made public for the benefit of the community and should be considered a preprint rather than a formally reviewed paper. Thus, this work is expected to appear in a conference with formal proceedings and/or in a journal