Bounding Sphere

In computer graphics and computational geometry, a bounding sphere is a bounding volume in the form of a sphere surrounding an object. In statistics and operations research a bounding sphere is an n-dimensional sphere containing a specific set of n-dimensional data points. In general, the sphere of interest for a given set of points is the minimal bounding sphere (the unique sphere with minimal radius among all spheres containing the points). Such spheres are useful in clustering, where groups of similar data points are classified together. In the statistical analysis the scattering of data points within a sphere may be attributed to measurement error or natural (usually thermal) processes, in which case the cluster represents a perturbation of an ideal point. In some circumstances this ideal point may be used as a substitute for the points in the cluster, advantageous in reducing calculation time. In operations research the clustering of values to an ideal point may also be used to reduce the number if inputs in order to obtain approximate values for NP-hard problems in a reasonable time. The point chosen is not usually the center of the sphere, as this can be biased by outliers, but instead some form of average location such as a least squares point is computed to represent the cluster.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
sow joan
painkiller (game)
jmijrvi
octavius
winchester magnum
aortic aneurysm
phagemid
jrvenp
zvonimir boban
and the ass saw the angel
battle of jieqiao
teardrop
giorgos karagounis
xenotransplantation
gossip girl
lineman's handset
dsa (disambiguation)
bsd daemon
jrt
vrba
jones in the fast lane
7 notas 7 colores
sardana
zmeu
super cannes
apa sambetei
la boca
alternating finite automaton
mesterul manole
mandira bedi
apa vie
spiridus
saratoga, new south wales
mission control center
taslim olawale elias
roy goode
william greenleaf eliot
elipando
hintlesham
james dunn (actor)
stephen benton elkins
glen waverley railway line, melbourne
allen j. ellender
george f. elliott