Tradeoffs for nearest neighbors on the sphere

November 24, 2015 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› arXiv.org

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Authors Thijs Laarhoven arXiv ID 1511.07527 Category cs.DS: Data Structures & Algorithms Cross-listed cs.CG, cs.IR Citations 21 Venue arXiv.org Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
We consider tradeoffs between the query and update complexities for the (approximate) nearest neighbor problem on the sphere, extending the recent spherical filters to sparse regimes and generalizing the scheme and analysis to account for different tradeoffs. In a nutshell, for the sparse regime the tradeoff between the query complexity $n^{ρ_q}$ and update complexity $n^{ρ_u}$ for data sets of size $n$ is given by the following equation in terms of the approximation factor $c$ and the exponents $ρ_q$ and $ρ_u$: $$c^2\sqrt{ρ_q}+(c^2-1)\sqrt{ρ_u}=\sqrt{2c^2-1}.$$ For small $c=1+Ρ$, minimizing the time for updates leads to a linear space complexity at the cost of a query time complexity $n^{1-4Ρ^2}$. Balancing the query and update costs leads to optimal complexities $n^{1/(2c^2-1)}$, matching bounds from [Andoni-Razenshteyn, 2015] and [Dubiner, IEEE-TIT'10] and matching the asymptotic complexities of [Andoni-Razenshteyn, STOC'15] and [Andoni-Indyk-Laarhoven-Razenshteyn-Schmidt, NIPS'15]. A subpolynomial query time complexity $n^{o(1)}$ can be achieved at the cost of a space complexity of the order $n^{1/(4Ρ^2)}$, matching the bound $n^{Ω(1/Ρ^2)}$ of [Andoni-Indyk-Patrascu, FOCS'06] and [Panigrahy-Talwar-Wieder, FOCS'10] and improving upon results of [Indyk-Motwani, STOC'98] and [Kushilevitz-Ostrovsky-Rabani, STOC'98]. For large $c$, minimizing the update complexity results in a query complexity of $n^{2/c^2+O(1/c^4)}$, improving upon the related exponent for large $c$ of [Kapralov, PODS'15] by a factor $2$, and matching the bound $n^{Ω(1/c^2)}$ of [Panigrahy-Talwar-Wieder, FOCS'08]. Balancing the costs leads to optimal complexities $n^{1/(2c^2-1)}$, while a minimum query time complexity can be achieved with update complexity $n^{2/c^2+O(1/c^4)}$, improving upon the previous best exponents of Kapralov by a factor $2$.
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