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Path Queries in Weighted TreesZhou, Gelin January 2012 (has links)
Trees are fundamental structures in computer science, being widely used in modeling
and representing different types of data in numerous computer applications. In many cases,
properties of objects being modeled are stored as weights or labels on the nodes of trees.
Thus researchers have studied the preprocessing of weighted trees in which each node is
assigned a weight, in order to support various path queries, for which a certain function
over the weights of the nodes along a given query path in the tree is computed [3, 14, 22, 26].
In this thesis, we consider the problem of supporting several various path queries over
a tree on n weighted nodes, where the weights are drawn from a set of σ distinct values.
One query we support is the path median query, which asks for the median weight on a
path between two given nodes. For this and the more general path selection query, we
present a linear space data structure that answers queries in O(lg σ) time under the word
RAM model. This greatly improves previous results on the same problem, as previous data
structures achieving O(lg n) query time use O(n lg^2 n) space, and previous linear space data
structures require O(n^ε) time to answer a query for any positive constant ε [26].
We also consider the path counting query and the path reporting query, where a path
counting query asks for the number of nodes on a query path whose weights are in a
query range, and a path reporting query requires to report these nodes. Our linear space
data structure supports path counting queries with O(lg σ) query time. This matches
the result of Chazelle [14] when σ is close to n, and has better performance when σ is
significantly smaller than n. The same data structure can also support path reporting
queries in O(lg σ + occ lg σ) time, where occ is the size of output. In addition, we present
a data structure that answers path reporting queries in O(lg σ + occ lg lg σ) time, using
O(n lg lg σ) words of space. These are the first data structures that answer path reporting
queries.
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Path Queries in Weighted TreesZhou, Gelin January 2012 (has links)
Trees are fundamental structures in computer science, being widely used in modeling
and representing different types of data in numerous computer applications. In many cases,
properties of objects being modeled are stored as weights or labels on the nodes of trees.
Thus researchers have studied the preprocessing of weighted trees in which each node is
assigned a weight, in order to support various path queries, for which a certain function
over the weights of the nodes along a given query path in the tree is computed [3, 14, 22, 26].
In this thesis, we consider the problem of supporting several various path queries over
a tree on n weighted nodes, where the weights are drawn from a set of σ distinct values.
One query we support is the path median query, which asks for the median weight on a
path between two given nodes. For this and the more general path selection query, we
present a linear space data structure that answers queries in O(lg σ) time under the word
RAM model. This greatly improves previous results on the same problem, as previous data
structures achieving O(lg n) query time use O(n lg^2 n) space, and previous linear space data
structures require O(n^ε) time to answer a query for any positive constant ε [26].
We also consider the path counting query and the path reporting query, where a path
counting query asks for the number of nodes on a query path whose weights are in a
query range, and a path reporting query requires to report these nodes. Our linear space
data structure supports path counting queries with O(lg σ) query time. This matches
the result of Chazelle [14] when σ is close to n, and has better performance when σ is
significantly smaller than n. The same data structure can also support path reporting
queries in O(lg σ + occ lg σ) time, where occ is the size of output. In addition, we present
a data structure that answers path reporting queries in O(lg σ + occ lg lg σ) time, using
O(n lg lg σ) words of space. These are the first data structures that answer path reporting
queries.
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