Consistent labeling of rotating maps

Dynamic maps that allow continuous map rotations, for example, on mobile devices, encounter new geometric labeling issues unseen in static maps before. We study the following dynamic map labeling problem: The input is an abstract map consisting of a set $P$ of points in the plane with attached horiz...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of computational geometry Vol. 7; no. 1
Main Authors Andreas Gemsa, Martin Nöllenburg, Ignaz Rutter
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Carleton University 01.05.2016
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Summary:Dynamic maps that allow continuous map rotations, for example, on mobile devices, encounter new geometric labeling issues unseen in static maps before. We study the following dynamic map labeling problem: The input is an abstract map consisting of a set $P$ of points in the plane with attached horizontally aligned rectangular labels. While the map with the point set $P$ is rotated, all labels remain horizontally aligned. We are interested in a consistent labeling of $P$ under rotation, i.e., an assignment of a single (possibly empty) active interval of angles for each label that determines its visibility under rotations such that visible labels neither intersect each other (soft conflicts) nor occlude points in $P$ at any rotation angle (hard conflicts). Our goal is to find a consistent labeling that maximizes the number of visible labels integrated over all rotation angles.We first introduce a general model for labeling rotating maps and derive basic geometric properties of consistent solutions. We show NP-hardness of the above optimization problem even for unit-square labels. We then present a constant-factor approximation for this problem based on line stabbing, and refine it further into an efficient polynomial-time approximation scheme (EPTAS).
ISSN:1920-180X
DOI:10.20382/jocg.v7i1a15