| Literature DB >> 23844017 |
Gregory Leibon1, Daniel N Rockmore.
Abstract
In this paper we show how the coupling of the notion of a network with directions with the adaptation of the four-point probe from materials testing gives rise to a natural geometry on such networks. This four-point probe geometry shares many of the properties of hyperbolic geometry wherein the network directions take the place of the sphere at infinity, enabling a navigation of the network in terms of pairs of directions: the geodesic through a pair of points is oriented from one direction to another direction, the pair of which are uniquely determined. We illustrate this in the interesting example of the pages of Wikipedia devoted to Mathematics, or "The MathWiki." The applicability of these ideas extends beyond Wikipedia to provide a natural framework for visual search and to prescribe a natural mode of navigation for any kind of "knowledge space" in which higher order concepts aggregate various instances of information. Other examples would include genre or author organization of cultural objects such as books, movies, documents or even merchandise in an online store.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23844017 PMCID: PMC3701066 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0067508
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fundamental Theorem of Galois Theory to Gauss-Bonnet Theorem.
| FPP-Geodesic | Path Length Geodesic |
| Fundamental Theorem of Galois Theory | Fundamental Theorem of Galois Theory |
| Pfister Form | Fundamental Theorem of Algebra |
| Prufer Rank | The Gauss-Bonnet Theorem |
| Tensor Product of Quadratic Forms | |
| Fundamental Domain | |
| Modular Symbol | |
| Unfolding (functions) | |
| Kuga Fiber Variety | |
| Minkowski-Hlawka Theorem | |
| Fuchsian Model | |
| (GX)-manifold | |
| Poincare Model | |
| Riemann Manifold | |
| Gromov's Compactness Theorem (topology) | |
| Cayley Surface | |
| Prescribed Scalar Curvature Problem | |
| Connector (mathematics) | |
| Calculus on Manifolds | |
| The Gauss-Bonnet Theorem |
In the column on the left we see the FPP-geodesic that navigates in the MathWiki from ‘The Fundamental Theorem of Galois Theory’ to the ‘The Gauss-Bonnet Theorem’ (with respective associated directions – i.e., “List of” pages – ‘List of Algebra Topics’ and ‘List of Geometry Topics’) and on the right we see the path length geodesic between these two pages. Note that the FPP-geodesic results in a more conceptually gradual path than the path length optimized route.
Geodesic from Gauss-Bonnet Theorem to the Central Limit Theorem.
| FPP-Geodesic | Path Length Geodesic |
| The Gauss-Bonnet Theorem | The Gauss-Bonnet Theorem |
| Calculus on Manifolds | Measure (mathematics) |
| Nonmetricity Tensor | Gibbs Measure' |
| Autoparallel | Central Limit Theorem |
| Riemann Manifold | |
| Last Geometric Statement ofJacobi | |
| Peetre Theorem | |
| Uniformization | |
| Distortion (mathematics) | |
| Statistical Manifold | |
| Minkowski Distance | |
| Invariant Measure | |
| Index Set | |
| Self-dissimilarity | |
| Realization (probability) | |
| Stationary distribution | |
| Information Projection | |
| Martingale Difference Sequence | |
| Slepian's Lemmae | |
| Minimal Entropy Martingale Measure | |
| Limit Theorem | |
| Central Limit Theorem |
In the column on the left we see the FPP-geodesic that navigates in the MathWiki from the ‘The Gauss-Bonnet Theorem to the ‘The Central Limit Theorem’ (with respective associated directions – i.e., “List of” pages – ‘List of Geometry Topics’ and ‘List of Stochastic Processes’) and on the right we see the path length geodesic between these two pages. Note that the FPP-geodesic results in a more conceptually gradual path than the path length optimized route.
Figure 1Hyperbolic triangle embedding comparisons.
Comparison of ideal triangle in the conformal Poincaré model (left) with MDS embedding of the (truncated) triangle with indicated points on the triangles's boundary embedded respecting distance (right). The relevance is that to embed our networks we use the metric and the MDS into a Euclidean space, and as such our representations will be attempting to mimic the distances (as best as possible) and not the angle as is the case in the more familiar Poincaré and upper half space representations of hyperbolic geometry.
Figure 2Square grid as a network with directions.
The lefthand figure shows a square grid with obvious boundary given by the collection of vertices with less than four neighbors. On the right is the three-dimensional MDS embedding of the hyperbolic metric on the chain with given by the boundary. Notice the saddle point structure of the embedding, consistent with a hyperbolic geometry.
Figure 3Schematic of a pair of geodesic bundles.
We have that , but, although there are points in the form and in , we see that is not in .
The points at infinity in the MathWiki Space.
| The ‘List of’ pages at ∞ | |
| List of Abstract Algebra Topics | List of Curve Topics |
| List of Triangle Topics | List of Mathematical Topics in quantum theory |
| List of Lie Group Topics | List of algebraic_coding_theory Topics |
| List of Complex Analysis Topics | List of Set Theory Topics |
| List of Basic Probability Topics | List of Fourier Analysis Topics |
| List of general Topology Topics | List of Algorithm General Topics |
| List of geometry Topics | List of Partial Differential Equation Topics |
| List of numerical Computational Geometry Topics | List of Topology Topics |
| List of Geometric Topology Topics | List of Group Theory Topics |
| List of Computer Graphics and Descriptive Geometry Topics | List of Multivariable Calculus Topics |
| List of Partition Topics | List of Differential Geometry Topics |
| List of Statistical Topics | List of Variational Topics |
| List of Stochastic Processes Topics | List of Permutation Topics |
| List of Linear Algebra Topics | List of Algebraic Topology Topics |
| List of Calculus Topics | List of Homological Algebra Topics |
| List of Exponential Topics | List of Number Theory topics |
| List of Commutative Algebra Topics | List of Recreational Number Theory Topics |
| List of Computability and Complexity Topics | List of Basic Algebra Topics |
| List of Boolean Algebra Topics | List of Mathematical Logic Topics |
| List of Representation Theory Topics | List of Integration and Measure Theory Topics |
| List of Factorial and Binomial Topics | List of String Theory Topics |
| List of Numerical Analysis Topics | List of Topics Related to pi |
| List of Real Analysis Topics | List of Mathematical Topics in Relativity Topics |
| List of Knot Theory Topics | List of Trigonometry Topics |
| List of Convexity Topics | List of Algebraic Number Theory Topics |
| List of Functional Analysis Topics | List of Numeral System topics |
| List of Probability Topics | List of Combinatorial Computational Geometry |
| List of Dynamical Systems and Differential Equations Topics | List of Polynomial Topics |
| List of Graph Theory Topics | List of Order Theory Topics |
| List of Mathematical Topics in Classical Mechanics' | List of Circle Topics |
| List of Harmonic Analysis Topics | List of Algebraic Geometry Topics |
These are the “List of” pages that make up the set of directions in the MathWiki viewed as a network with directions.
Figure 4MathWiki Space triangle Example 1.
In this example we see a triangle in the MathWiki space, determined by the vertices that correspond to the Math Wiki pages for The Central Limit Theorem, The Fundamental Theorem of Galois Theory, and The Gauss-Bonnet Theorem. We have extended the geodesic bundles between the vertices towards infinity. On the left is a schematic showing us the points at infinity involved (as the “List of” pages) and how this triangle might appear in the Poincaré disk model. When we view the actual network on the right we use the metric and MDS to place these vertices into a two-dimensional Euclidean space. Hence, the representation in that figure will look similar to the MDS of a triangle in hyperbolic space and not the conformal representation in the Poincaré Disk model.
Figure 5MathWiki Space triangle Example 2.
Here we have modified the example of Figure 4 by replacing the node (MathWiki page) for The Central Limit Theorem with that of Classification Theorem and leaving the other two nodes the same (given by the pages for The Fundamental Theorem of Galois Theory and The Gauss-Bonnet Theorem). Again we extend the geodesic bundles between the vertices towards infinity. On the left is a schematic showing us the points at infinity involved (as the “List of” pages) and how this triangle might appear in the Poincaré disk model. When we view the actual network on the right we use the metric and MDS to place these vertices into a two-dimensional Euclidean space. Hence, the representation in that figure will look similar to the MDS of a triangle in hyperbolic space and not the conformal representation in the Poincaré Disk model. Note that in this example, there are four directions (points at infinity) involved, reflecting the difference in (conceptual) proximity to The Fundamental Theorem of Galois Theory and The Gauss Bonnet Theorem of The Classification Theorem versus that of the Central Limit Theorem.