A Graph Theoretic Approach for Multi-Objective Budget Constrained Capsule Wardrobe Recommendation

2022 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-33
Author(s):  
Shubham Patil ◽  
Debopriyo Banerjee ◽  
Shamik Sural

Traditionally, capsule wardrobes are manually designed by expert fashionistas through their creativity and technical prowess. The goal is to curate minimal fashion items that can be assembled into several compatible and versatile outfits. It is usually a cost and time intensive process, and hence lacks scalability. Although there are a few approaches that attempt to automate the process, they tend to ignore the price of items or shopping budget. In this article, we formulate this task as a multi-objective budget constrained capsule wardrobe recommendation ( MOBCCWR ) problem. It is modeled as a bipartite graph having two disjoint vertex sets corresponding to top-wear and bottom-wear items, respectively. An edge represents compatibility between the corresponding item pairs. The objective is to find a 1-neighbor subset of fashion items as a capsule wardrobe that jointly maximize compatibility and versatility scores by considering corresponding user-specified preference weight coefficients and an overall shopping budget as a means of achieving personalization. We study the complexity class of MOBCCWR , show that it is NP-Complete, and propose a greedy algorithm for finding a near-optimal solution in real time. We also analyze the time complexity and approximation bound for our algorithm. Experimental results show the effectiveness of the proposed approach on both real and synthetic datasets.

Genetics ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 165 (4) ◽  
pp. 2235-2247
Author(s):  
Immanuel V Yap ◽  
David Schneider ◽  
Jon Kleinberg ◽  
David Matthews ◽  
Samuel Cartinhour ◽  
...  

AbstractFor many species, multiple maps are available, often constructed independently by different research groups using different sets of markers and different source material. Integration of these maps provides a higher density of markers and greater genome coverage than is possible using a single study. In this article, we describe a novel approach to comparing and integrating maps by using abstract graphs. A map is modeled as a directed graph in which nodes represent mapped markers and edges define the order of adjacent markers. Independently constructed graphs representing corresponding maps from different studies are merged on the basis of their common loci. Absence of a path between two nodes indicates that their order is undetermined. A cycle indicates inconsistency among the mapping studies with regard to the order of the loci involved. The integrated graph thus produced represents a complete picture of all of the mapping studies that comprise it, including all of the ambiguities and inconsistencies among them. The objective of this representation is to guide additional research aimed at interpreting these ambiguities and inconsistencies in locus order rather than presenting a “consensus order” that ignores these problems.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1706 ◽  
pp. 012115
Author(s):  
P Sangeetha ◽  
M Shanmugapriya ◽  
R Sundareswaran ◽  
K Sowmya ◽  
S Srinidhi

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