
handle: 10533/131585
Wavelet trees are widely used in the representation of sequences, permutations, text collections, binary relations, discrete points, and other succinct data structures. We show, however, that this still falls short of exploiting all of the virtues of this versatile data structure. In particular we show how to use wavelet trees to solve fundamental algorithmic problems such as {\em range quantile} queries, {\em range next value} queries, and {\em range intersection} queries. We explore several applications of these queries in Information Retrieval, in particular {\em document retrieval} in hierarchical and temporal documents, and in the representation of {\em inverted lists}.
ta113, FOS: Computer and information sciences, Document retrieval, Data structures, Theoretical Computer Science, Computer Science - Information Retrieval, 1D range queries, ta5141, Computer Science - Data Structures and Algorithms, Information retrieval, Data Structures and Algorithms (cs.DS), Wavelet trees, ta513, ta512, ta515, Information Retrieval (cs.IR), Computer Science(all)
ta113, FOS: Computer and information sciences, Document retrieval, Data structures, Theoretical Computer Science, Computer Science - Information Retrieval, 1D range queries, ta5141, Computer Science - Data Structures and Algorithms, Information retrieval, Data Structures and Algorithms (cs.DS), Wavelet trees, ta513, ta512, ta515, Information Retrieval (cs.IR), Computer Science(all)
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| influence This indicator reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically). | Top 10% | |
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