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A General Framework for Progressive Data Compression and Retrieval

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Academic paper
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Academic Paper attributes

arXiv ID
2308.117590
arXiv Classification
Computer science
Computer science
0
Publication URL
arxiv.org/pdf/2308.1...59.pdf0
Publisher
ArXiv
ArXiv
0
DOI
doi.org/10.48550/ar...08.117590
Paid/Free
Free0
Academic Discipline
Computer graphics
Computer graphics
0
Computer science
Computer science
0
Database
Database
0
Submission Date
August 7, 2023
0
Author Names
Peter Lindstrom0
Victor A. P. Magri0
Paper abstract

In scientific simulations, observations, and experiments, the cost of transferring data to and from disk and across networks has become a significant bottleneck that particularly impacts subsequent data analysis and visualization. To address this challenge, compression techniques have been widely adopted. However, traditional lossy compression approaches often require setting error tolerances conservatively to respect the numerical sensitivities of a wide variety of post hoc data analyses, some of which may not even be known a priori. Progressive data compression and retrieval has emerged as a solution, allowing for the adaptive handling of compressed data according to the needs of a given post-processing task. However, few analysis algorithms natively support progressive data processing, and adapting compression techniques, file formats, client/server frameworks, and APIs to support progressivity can be challenging. This work presents a general framework that supports progressive-precision data queries independently of the underlying data compressor or number representation. Our approach is based on a multiple-component representation that successively, with each new component, reduces the error between the original and compressed field, allowing each field in the progressive sequence to be expressed as a partial sum of components. We have implemented our approach on top of four popular scientific data compressors and have evaluated its behavior on several real-world data sets from the SDRBench collection. Numerical results indicate that our framework is effective in terms of accuracy compared to each of the standalone compressors it builds upon. In addition, (de)compression time is proportional to the number and granularity of components. Finally, our framework allows for fully lossless compression using lossy compressors when a sufficient number of components are employed.

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