Michael Lesnick

2papers

2 Papers

36.7CGMay 20
Bifunction and Interlevel Delaunay Trifiltrations

Ángel Javier Alonso, Michael Kerber, Tung Lam et al.

A key property of the Delaunay filtration is that it is topologically (i.e., weakly) equivalent to the offset (union-of-balls) filtration. Recently, this filtration has been extended to point clouds equipped with an $\mathbb{R}$-valued function, yielding a computable 2-parameter filtration that satisfies an analogous weak equivalence. Motivated in part by the study of time-varying data, we introduce a 3-parameter extension of the Delaunay filtration for point clouds equipped with an $\mathbb{R}^2$-valued function, also satisfying an analogous weak equivalence. For a point cloud $X \subset \mathbb{R}^d$, our trifiltration has size $O\bigl(|X|^{\lceil(d+1)/2\rceil+1}\bigr)$. We present an algorithm that computes this trifiltration in time $O\bigl(|X|^{\lceil d/2\rceil+2}\bigr)$, together with an implementation. Our experiments demonstrate that implementation can handle thousands of points in $\mathbb{R}^3$, with memory growth that is nearly linear.

CGDec 22, 2021
The Universal $\ell^p$-Metric on Merge Trees

Robert Cardona, Justin Curry, Tung Lam et al.

Adapting a definition given by Bjerkevik and Lesnick for multiparameter persistence modules, we introduce an $\ell^p$-type extension of the interleaving distance on merge trees. We show that our distance is a metric, and that it upper-bounds the $p$-Wasserstein distance between the associated barcodes. For each $p\in[1,\infty]$, we prove that this distance is stable with respect to cellular sublevel filtrations and that it is the universal (i.e., largest) distance satisfying this stability property. In the $p=\infty$ case, this gives a novel proof of universality for the interleaving distance on merge trees.