Kanat Tangwongsan

2papers

2 Papers

DSNov 7, 2011
Near Linear-Work Parallel SDD Solvers, Low-Diameter Decomposition, and Low-Stretch Subgraphs

Guy E. Blelloch, Anupam Gupta, Ioannis Koutis et al.

We present the design and analysis of a near linear-work parallel algorithm for solving symmetric diagonally dominant (SDD) linear systems. On input of a SDD $n$-by-$n$ matrix $A$ with $m$ non-zero entries and a vector $b$, our algorithm computes a vector $\tilde{x}$ such that $\norm[A]{\tilde{x} - A^+b} \leq \vareps \cdot \norm[A]{A^+b}$ in $O(m\log^{O(1)}{n}\log{\frac1ε})$ work and $O(m^{1/3+θ}\log \frac1ε)$ depth for any fixed $θ> 0$. The algorithm relies on a parallel algorithm for generating low-stretch spanning trees or spanning subgraphs. To this end, we first develop a parallel decomposition algorithm that in polylogarithmic depth and $\otilde(|E|)$ work, partitions a graph into components with polylogarithmic diameter such that only a small fraction of the original edges are between the components. This can be used to generate low-stretch spanning trees with average stretch $O(n^α)$ in $O(n^{1+α})$ work and $O(n^α)$ depth. Alternatively, it can be used to generate spanning subgraphs with polylogarithmic average stretch in $\otilde(|E|)$ work and polylogarithmic depth. We apply this subgraph construction to derive a parallel linear system solver. By using this solver in known applications, our results imply improved parallel randomized algorithms for several problems, including single-source shortest paths, maximum flow, minimum-cost flow, and approximate maximum flow.

DSJan 13, 2017
Streaming k-Means Clustering with Fast Queries

Yu Zhang, Kanat Tangwongsan, Srikanta Tirthapura

We present methods for k-means clustering on a stream with a focus on providing fast responses to clustering queries. Compared to the current state-of-the-art, our methods provide substantial improvement in the query time for cluster centers while retaining the desirable properties of provably small approximation error and low space usage. Our algorithms rely on a novel idea of "coreset caching" that systematically reuses coresets (summaries of data) computed for recent queries in answering the current clustering query. We present both theoretical analysis and detailed experiments demonstrating their correctness and efficiency