Program equivalence and context-free grammars
Barry K. Rosen
SWAT 1972
Any notion of "closeness" in pattern matching should have the property that if A is close to B, and B is close to C, then A is close to C. Traditionally, this property is attained because of the triangle inequality (d(A, C) ≤ d(A, B) + d(B, C), where d represents a notion of distance). However, the full power of the triangle inequality is not needed for this property to hold. Instead, a "relaxed triangle inequality" suffices, of the form d(A, C) < c(d(A, B) + d(B, C)), where c is a constant that is not too large. In this paper, we show that one of the measures used for distances between shapes in (an experimental version of) IBM's QBIC1 ("Query by Image Content") system (Niblack et al., 1993) satisfies a relaxed triangle inequality, although it does not satisfy the triangle inequality.
Barry K. Rosen
SWAT 1972
Yale Song, Zhen Wen, et al.
IJCAI 2013
Anurag Ajay, Seungwook Han, et al.
NeurIPS 2023
Ryan Johnson, Ippokratis Pandis
CIDR 2013