Fermat is a Python library that computes the Fermat distance estimator (also called d-distance estimator) proposed in
- Weighted Geodesic Distance Following Fermat's Principle (see https://openreview.net/pdf?id=BJfaMIJwG).
- Nonhomogeneous Euclidean first-passage percolation and distance learning (see https://arxiv.org/abs/1810.09398)
A density-based estimator for weighted geodesic distances is proposed. Let M be a D-dimensional manifold and consider a sample of N points X_n living in M. Let l(.,.) be a distance defined in M (a typical choice could be Euclidean distance). For d>=1 and given two points p and q in M we define the Fermat distance estimator as
The minimization is done over all K>=2 and all finite sequences of data points with x1= argmin l(x,p) and xK = argmin l(x,q).
When d=1, we recover the distance l(.,.) but if d>1, the Fermat distance tends to follow more closely the manifold structure and regions with high density values.
You can import Fermat directly from the folder where you have the repository. For example
import sys
sys.path.append(path_to_FermatFolder)
from fermat import Fermat
However, if you are working on Ubuntu (or any similar distribution) you can install the Fermat package
running the following command in a terminal
python3 setup.py build && sudo python3 setup.py install
The optimization performed to compute the Fermat distance estimator runs all over the possible paths of points between each pair of points. We implement an algorithm that computes the exact Fermat distance and two that compute approximations.
Permorf the Floyd-Warshall algorithm that gives the exact Fermat distance estimator in O( n^3 )
operations between all possible paths that conects each pair of points.
With probability arbitrary high we can restrict the minimum path search to paths where each consecutive pair of points are k-nearest neighbours, with k = O(log n)
. Then, we use Dijkstra algorithm on the graph of k-nearest neighbours from each point. The complexity is O( n * ( k * n * log n ) )
.
If the number of points n is too high and neither Floyd-Warshall and Dijkstra run in appropiate times, we implemente a gready version based on landmarks. Let consider a set of l of point in the data set (the landmarks) and denote s_j
the distance of the point s
to the landmark j
. Then, we can bound the distance d(s,t)
between any two points s
and t
as
lower = max_j { | s_j - t_j | } <= d(s,t) <= min_j { s_j + t_j } = upper
and estimate d(s,t)
as a function of lower
and upper
(for example, d(s,t) ~ (_lower + upper_) / 2
). The complexity is O( l * ( k * n * log n ) )
.
- Exact and approximate algorithms to compute the Fermat distance.
- Examples explaining how to use this package.
- Documentation
If you have an open-ended or a research question:
When citing fermat in academic papers and theses, please use this BibTeX entry:
@inproceedings{
sapienza2018weighted,
title={Weighted Geodesic Distance Following Fermat's Principle},
author={Facundo Sapienza and Pablo Groisman and Matthieu Jonckheere},
year={2018},
url={https://openreview.net/forum?id=BJfaMIJwG}
}