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Quad Trees: CMSC 420

The document discusses quad trees, which are a data structure used to store spatial data. Quad trees recursively subdivide space into four quadrants and store points in leaf nodes. They allow efficient queries like finding points within a given region. The document covers applications of quad trees, representations of geometric objects, common geometric operations, and types of queries supported. It also discusses properties of PR quad trees, which store point data, including their height and size.

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Satyajeet Parida
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
49 views

Quad Trees: CMSC 420

The document discusses quad trees, which are a data structure used to store spatial data. Quad trees recursively subdivide space into four quadrants and store points in leaf nodes. They allow efficient queries like finding points within a given region. The document covers applications of quad trees, representations of geometric objects, common geometric operations, and types of queries supported. It also discusses properties of PR quad trees, which store point data, including their height and size.

Uploaded by

Satyajeet Parida
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Quad Trees

CMSC 420
Applications of Geometric / Spatial Data Structs.

• Computer graphics, games, movies

• computer vision, CAD, street maps (google maps /


google Earth)

• Human-computer interface design (windowing


systems)

• Virtual reality

• Visualization (graphing complex functions)


Geometric Objects

• Scalars: 1-d poin


• Point: location in d-dimensional space. d-tuple of
scalars. P=(x1,x2,x3...,xd)
- arrays: double p[d];
- structures: struct { double x, y, z; }
- good compromise:
struct Point {
const int DIM = 3;
double coord[DIM];
};

• Vectors: direction and magnitude (length) in that


direction.
Lines, Segments, Rays

• Line: infinite in both directions


- y = mx + b [slope m, intercept b]
- ax + by = c
- In higher dimensions, any two points define a line.

• Ray: infinite in one direction


• Segment: finite in both directions
• Polygons: cycle of joined line segments What’s a good
representation
- simple if they don’t corss for a polygon?
- convex if any line segment connecting two points on its
circularly
surface lies entirely within the shape. linked list
- convex hull of a set of points P: smallest convex set that of points
contains P
Geometric Operations

• P - Q is a vector going from point Q to P


P
Q
• Q + v is a point at the head of vector v, if v were
anchored at Q x

• v + u: serially walk along v and then u. v+u is the


direct shortcut.
v u
v+u
• Great use for C++ operator overloading.
Types of Queries

• Is the object in the set?

• What is the closest object to a given point?

• What objects does a query object intersect with?

• What is the first object hit by the given ray? [Ray


shooting]

• What objects contain P?

• What objects are in a given range? [range queries]


Intersection of Circle & Rectangle

Circle
center = C
R.high[1]

Dimension 1
R.low[1]

R.low[0] R.high[0]
Question: how do you
compute the distance
from circle center to the
Dimension 0 rectangle?
Intersection of Circle & Rectangle

R.high[1]
Instead of a lot of
special cases, break the
distance down by
R.low[1] dimension (component)

R.low[0] R.high[0]

Distance = square root of the sum of the squares of the


distances in each dimension

d = √dx2 + dy2 + dz2


d2 = distx(C,R)2 + disty(C,R)2

distx(C,R) is 0 unless C is in blue regions


Distance between point C and rectangle R

distance(C, R):
dist = 0
for i = 0 to DIM:
if C[i] < R.low[i]:
dist += square(R.low[i] - C[i])

else if C[i] > R.high[i]:


dist += square(C[i] - R.high[i])

return sqrt(dist)
Why are geometric (spatial) data different?

No natural ordering...
• In 1-d:
- we usually had a natural ordering on the keys (integers,
alphabetical order, ...)
- But how do you order a set of points?

• Take a step back:


- In the 1-d case, how did we use this ordering?
- Mostly, it gave us an implicit was to partition the data.

• So:
- Instead of explicitly ordering and implicitly partitioning,
we usually: explicitly partition.
- Partitioning is very natural in geometric spaces.
Why are geometric (spatial) data different?
Static case also interesting...
• In 1-d:
- usually the static case (all data known at start) is not very
interesting
- can be solved by sorting the data
(heaps => sorted lists, balanced trees => binary search)

• With geometric data,


- it’s sometimes hard to answer queries even if all data are
known (what’s the analog of binary search for a set of
points?)
- Therefore, emphasize updates less (though we’ll still
consider them)
- Model: preprocess the data (may be “slow” like
O(n log n)) and then have efficient answers to queries.
Point Data Sets – Today

• Data we want to store is a collection of d-


dimensional points.
- We’ll focus on 2-d for now (hard to draw anything else)

• Simplest query: “Is point P in the collection?”


PR Quadtrees
PR Quadtrees (Point-Region)

• Recursively subdivide cells into 4 equal-sized


subcells until a cell has only one point in it.

• Each division results in a single node with 4 child


pointers.

• When cell contains no points, add special “no-point”


node.

• When cell contains 1 point, add node containing


point + data associated with that point (perhaps a
pointer out to a bigger data record).
PR Quadtrees Internal Nodes

NW NE
NW SE
NE SW

SW SE
PR Quadtrees

L
M Q
N
M Q
N P R
P R

NW SE
NE SW
Find in PR Quadtrees

L
M Q
N
M Q
N P R
P R
Insert in PR Quadtrees

• insert(P):
- find(P)
- if cell where P would go is empty, then add P to it
(change from to )
- If cell where P would go has a point Q in it, repeatedly
split until P is separated from Q. Then add P to correct
(empty) cell.

• How many times might you have to split?


unbounded in n
Delete in PR Quadtrees

• delete(P):
- find(P)
- If cell that would contain P is empty, return not found!
- Else, remove P (change to ).
- If at most 1 siblings of the cell has a point, merge siblings
into a single cell. Repeat until at least two siblings
contain a point.

• A cell “has a point” if it is or .


Features of PR Quadtrees
• Locations of splits don’t depend on exact point
values (it is a partitioning of space, not of the set of
keys)

• Leaves should be treated differently that internal


nodes because:
- Empty leaf nodes are common,
- Only leaves contain data

• Bounding boxes constructed on the fly and passed


into the recursive calls.

• Extension: allow a constant b > 1 points in a cell


(bucket quadtrees)
Height Lemma

• if
- c is the smallest distance between any two points
- s is the side length of the initial square containing all the
points

• Then
- the depth of a quadtree is ≤ log(s/c) + 3/2

internal node Therefore, s√2/2i ≥ c


diagonal
of depth i Hence,
c length =
s√2/2i i ≤ log s√2/c = log(s/c) + 1/2

side length = Height of tree is max depth of


s/2i internal node + 1, so height ≤
log(s/c) + 3/2
Size Corollary

Thm. A quadtree of depth d storing n points has


O((d+1)n) nodes.

Proof: Every internal node represents a square with at


least 2 points in it.
Hence, each level has fewer than n nodes.
North Neighbor
North neighbor of a cell S at depth i
is the deepest node of depth ≤ i that
north neighbor of the root is NULL is adjacent to the north side of S.

north neighbor of a SW or
SE node is the NW or NE
node respectively

North neighbor of a NE or
NW node is a child of the
north neighbor of its parent.

Algorithm: walk up until you get an easy


case, apply easy case, and then walk down,
moving to SW or SE as appropriate
Compute North Neighbor

def NorthNeighbor(v, Q):


if parent(v) is None: return None
if v is SW-child: return NW-child(parent(v))
if v is SE-child: return NE-child(parent(v))

u = NorthNeighbor(parent(v), Q)
if u is None or is_leaf(u): return u

if v is NW-child: return SW-child(u)


else return SE-child(u)
Demo
An Advantage of PR quadtrees

• Since partition locations don’t depend on the data


points, two different sets of data can be stored in two
separate PR quadtrees
- The partition locations will be “the same”
- E.g. a quadrant Q1 in T1 is either the same as, a superset
of, or a subset of any quadrant Q2 in T2
- You cannot get partially overlapping quadrants
- Recursive algorithms cleaner, e.g.
Issues with PR Quadtrees

• Can be inefficient:
- two closely spaced points may require a lot of levels in
the tree to split them
- Have to divide up space finely enough so that they end
up in different cells

• Generalizing to large dimensions uses a lot of space.


- octtree = Quadtree in 3-D (each node has 8 pointers)

In d d = 20 =>
dimensions, nodes will ~
each node 1 million
has 2d children
pointers!
Split & Merge Decomposition

Subdivide into
uniform blocks
Split & Merge Decomposition

Subdivide into
uniform blocks

Merge similar
brothers
Split & Merge Decomposition

Subdivide into
uniform blocks

Merge similar
brothers

Subdivide non-
homogenous cells
Split & Merge Decomposition

Subdivide into
uniform blocks

Merge similar
brothers

Subdivide non-
homogenous cells

Group identical
blocks to get regions
MX Quadtrees

• Good for image data


- smallest element is known, e.g. a pixel
- Space is recursively subdivided until smallest unit is
reached:
- Always subdivide to smallest unit:
MX Quadtree Demo
MX (MatriX) Quadtrees Shape of final tree
independent of
• Points are always at leaves insertion order

• All leaves with points are the same depth:


MX Quadtree Notes & Applications
• Shape of final tree independent of insertion order

• Can be used to represent a matrix (especially 0/1 matrix)


- recursive decomposition of matrix (given by the MX tree) can be
used for faster matrix transposition and multiplication

• Compression and transmission of images


- Hierarchy => progressive transmission:
- transmitting high levels of the tree gives you a rough image
- lower levels gives you more detail

• Requires points come from a finite & discrete domain


Point Quadtrees

• Similar to PR Quadtrees, except we split on points in


the data set, rather than evenly dividing space.
• Handling infinite space:
- Special infinity value => allow rectangles to extend to
infinity in some directions
- Assume global bounding box
Point Quadtrees
Insertion into Point Quadtrees

• Insert(P):
- Find the region that would contain the point P.
- If P is encountered during the search, report Duplicate!
- Add point where you fall off the tree.

NW NE
35,40
(35,40)

SW SE
NW NE SW SE
Point Quadtree Demo
Deletion from Point Quadtrees

• Reinsert all the points in the subtree rooted at the


deleted node P.

• Can be expensive.

• There are some more clever ways to delete that


work well under some assumptions about the data.
Some performance facts (random data):

• Cost of building a point quadtree empirically shown


to be O(n log4 n) [Finkel,Bentley] with random
insertions

• Expected height is O(log n).

• Expected cost of inserting the ith node into a d-


dimensional quad tree is (2/d)ln i + O(1).
More balanced Point Quadtrees

• Optimized Point Quadtree: want no subtree rooted at node A to


contain more than half the nodes (points) under A.
• Assume you know all the data at the start:
x1 y1
x2 y2
x3 y3
...
• Sort the points lexicographically: primary key is x-coordinate,
secondary key is y-coordinate.
• Make root = the median of this list (middle element)
=> half the elements will be to the left of the root, half to the
right.
• Recursively apply to top and bottom halves of the list.
Pseudo Point Quadtrees

• Like PR quadtrees: splits don’t occur at data points.


• Like Point Quadtrees: actual key values determine
splits
• Determine a point that splits up the dataset in the
most balanced way.
- Overmars & van Leeuwen: for any N points, there is a
partitioning point so that each quadrant contains ≤
ceil(N/(d+1)) points.
Comparison of Point-based & Trie-based
Quadtrees
• “Trie-based” = MX and PR quadtrees
- rely on regular space decomposion
- data points associated only with leaf nodes
- simple deletion
- shape independent of insertion order

• Point-based quadtrees
- data points in internal nodes
- often have fewer nodes
- harder deletion
- shape depends on insertion order
Problems with Point Quadtrees

• May not be balanced...

- But expected to be if points are randomly inserted.

• Size is bounded in n.
- Partitioning key space rather than geometric space.
- Because each node contains a point, you have at most n
nodes.

• But may have lots of unused pointers if d is large!

• Solution is kd-trees.

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