ε-net (computational Geometry)
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An ''ε''-net (pronounced epsilon-net) in computational geometry is the approximation of a general set by a collection of simpler subsets. In
probability theory Probability theory is the branch of mathematics concerned with probability. Although there are several different probability interpretations, probability theory treats the concept in a rigorous mathematical manner by expressing it through a set o ...
it is the approximation of one probability distribution by another.


Background

Let ''X'' be a set and R be a set of subsets of ''X''; such a pair is called a ''range space'' or
hypergraph In mathematics, a hypergraph is a generalization of a graph in which an edge can join any number of vertices. In contrast, in an ordinary graph, an edge connects exactly two vertices. Formally, an undirected hypergraph H is a pair H = (X,E) wh ...
, and the elements of ''R'' are called ''ranges'' or ''hyperedges''. An ε-net of a subset ''P'' of ''X'' is a subset ''N'' of ''P'' such that any range ''r'' âˆˆ R with , ''r'' âˆ© ''P'',  â‰¥ ''ε'', ''P'', intersects ''N''. In other words, any range that intersects at least a proportion ε of the elements of ''P'' must also intersect the ''ε''-net ''N''. For example, suppose ''X'' is the set of points in the two-dimensional plane, ''R'' is the set of closed filled rectangles (products of closed intervals), and ''P'' is the unit square , 1nbsp;×  , 1 Then the set N consisting of the 8 points shown in the adjacent diagram is a 1/4-net of P, because any closed filled rectangle intersecting at least 1/4 of the unit square must intersect one of these points. In fact, any (axis-parallel) square, regardless of size, will have a similar 8-point 1/4-net. For any range space with finite
VC dimension VC may refer to: Military decorations * Victoria Cross, a military decoration awarded by the United Kingdom and also by certain Commonwealth nations ** Victoria Cross for Australia ** Victoria Cross (Canada) ** Victoria Cross for New Zealand * Vic ...
''d'', regardless of the choice of P, there exists an ε-net of ''P'' of size : O\left(\frac \log \frac\right); because the size of this set is independent of ''P'', any set ''P'' can be described using a set of fixed size. This facilitates the development of efficient
approximation algorithm In computer science and operations research, approximation algorithms are efficient algorithms that find approximate solutions to optimization problems (in particular NP-hard problems) with provable guarantees on the distance of the returned solu ...
s. For example, suppose we wish to estimate an upper bound on the area of a given region, that falls inside a particular rectangle ''P''. One can estimate this to within an additive factor of ''ε'' times the area of ''P'' by first finding an ''ε''-net of ''P'', counting the proportion of elements in the ε-net falling inside the region with respect to the rectangle ''P'', and then multiplying by the area of ''P''. The runtime of the algorithm depends only on ''ε'' and not ''P''. One straightforward way to compute an ε-net with high probability is to take a sufficient number of random points, where the number of random points also depends only on ''ε''. For example, in the diagram shown, any rectangle in the unit square containing at most three points in the 1/4-net has an area of at most 3/8 + 1/4 = 5/8. ε-nets also provide approximation algorithms for the
NP-complete In computational complexity theory, a problem is NP-complete when: # it is a problem for which the correctness of each solution can be verified quickly (namely, in polynomial time) and a brute-force search algorithm can find a solution by tryi ...
hitting set The set cover problem is a classical question in combinatorics, computer science, operations research, and complexity theory. It is one of Karp's 21 NP-complete problems shown to be NP-complete in 1972. Given a set of elements (called the un ...
and
set cover The set cover problem is a classical question in combinatorics, computer science, operations research, and complexity theory. It is one of Karp's 21 NP-complete problems shown to be NP-complete in 1972. Given a set of elements (called the un ...
problems..


Probability theory

Let P be a probability distribution over some set X. An \varepsilon-net for a class H \subseteq 2^X of subsets of X is any subset S \subseteq X such that for any h \in H :P(h) \ge \varepsilon \quad \Longrightarrow \quad S\cap h \neq \varnothing. Intuitively S approximates the probability distribution. A stronger notion is \varepsilon-approximation. An \varepsilon-approximation for class H is a subset S \subseteq X such that for any h \in H it holds :\left, P(h) - \frac \ < \varepsilon .


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:E-net Computational geometry Probability theory