We study online matching in the Euclidean $2$-dimesional plane with non-crossing constraint. The offline version was introduced by Atallah in 1985 and the online version was introduced and studied more recently by Bose et al. The input to the problem consists of a sequence of points, and upon arrival of a point an algorithm can match it with a previously unmatched point provided that line segments corresponding to the matched edges do not intersect. The decisions are irrevocable, and while an optimal offline solution always matches all the points, an online algorithm cannot match all the points in the worst case, unless it is given some side information, i.e., advice. We study two versions of this problem -- monomchromatic (MNM) and bichrom...
International audienceGiven a matching between n red points and n blue points by line segments in th...
We study the two-stage vertex-weighted online bipartite matching problem of Feng, Niazadeh, and Sabe...
In an L(2,1)-coloring of a graph, the vertices are colored with colors from an ordered set such that...
In an online problem, the input is revealed one piece at a time. In every time step, the online algo...
In the online version of the well-known graph coloring problem, the vertices appear one after the ot...
Abstract. The advice complexity of an online problem is a measure of how much knowledge of the futur...
In this paper, we examine the problem of "blocked online bipartite matching". This problem is simila...
For numerous online bipartite matching problems, such as edge-weighted matching and matching under t...
[[abstract]]Suppose we are given two sets R and B, each of n points in the plane. Define the cost of...
In online minimum cost matching on the line, n requests appear one by one and have to be matched imm...
In the online version of the well-known graph coloring problem, the vertices appear one after the ot...
In the online coloring problem the vertices are revealed one by one to an online algorithm, which ha...
Several well-studied graph problems aim to select a largest (or smallest) induced subgraph with a gi...
International audienceWhile randomized online algorithms have access to a sequence of uniform random...
Given a matching between n red points and n blue points by line segments in the plane, we consider t...
International audienceGiven a matching between n red points and n blue points by line segments in th...
We study the two-stage vertex-weighted online bipartite matching problem of Feng, Niazadeh, and Sabe...
In an L(2,1)-coloring of a graph, the vertices are colored with colors from an ordered set such that...
In an online problem, the input is revealed one piece at a time. In every time step, the online algo...
In the online version of the well-known graph coloring problem, the vertices appear one after the ot...
Abstract. The advice complexity of an online problem is a measure of how much knowledge of the futur...
In this paper, we examine the problem of "blocked online bipartite matching". This problem is simila...
For numerous online bipartite matching problems, such as edge-weighted matching and matching under t...
[[abstract]]Suppose we are given two sets R and B, each of n points in the plane. Define the cost of...
In online minimum cost matching on the line, n requests appear one by one and have to be matched imm...
In the online version of the well-known graph coloring problem, the vertices appear one after the ot...
In the online coloring problem the vertices are revealed one by one to an online algorithm, which ha...
Several well-studied graph problems aim to select a largest (or smallest) induced subgraph with a gi...
International audienceWhile randomized online algorithms have access to a sequence of uniform random...
Given a matching between n red points and n blue points by line segments in the plane, we consider t...
International audienceGiven a matching between n red points and n blue points by line segments in th...
We study the two-stage vertex-weighted online bipartite matching problem of Feng, Niazadeh, and Sabe...
In an L(2,1)-coloring of a graph, the vertices are colored with colors from an ordered set such that...