Abstract-We present Roadmap Sparsification by Edge Contraction (RSEC), a simple and effective algorithm for reducing the size of a motion-planning roadmap. The algorithm exhibits minimal effect on the quality of paths that can be extracted from the new roadmap. The primitive operation used by RSEC is edge contraction-the contraction of a roadmap edge to a single vertex and the connection of the new vertex to the neighboring vertices of the contracted edge. For certain scenarios, we compress more than 98% of the edges and vertices at the cost of degradation of average shortest path length by at most 2%.
We present Roadmap Sparsification by Edge Contraction (RSEC), a simple and effective algorithm for reducing the size of a motion-planning roadmap. The algorithm exhibits minimal effect on the quality of paths that can be extracted from the new roadmap. The primitive operation used by RSEC is edge contraction-the contraction of a roadmap edge to a single vertex and the connection of the new vertex to the neighboring vertices of the contracted edge. For certain scenarios, we compress more than 98% of the edges and vertices at the cost of degradation of average shortest path length by at most 2%.
We consider offsets of a union of convex objects. We aim for a filtration, a sequence of nested cell complexes, that captures the topological evolution of the offsets for increasing radii. We describe methods to compute a filtration based on the Voronoi partition with respect to the given convex objects. We prove that, in two and three dimensions, the size of the filtration is proportional to the size of the Voronoi diagram. Our algorithm runs in Θ(n log n) in the 2-dimensional case and in expected time O(n 3+ε ), for any ε > 0, in the 3-dimensional case. Our approach is inspired by alpha-complexes for point sets, but requires more involved machinery and analysis primarily since Voronoi regions of general convex objects do not form a good cover. We show by experiments that our approach results in a similarly fast and topologically more stable method for computing a filtration compared to approximating the input by point samples.
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