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In this article we study the amortized efficiency of the “move-to-front” and similar rules for dynamically maintaining a linear list. Under the assumption that accessing the ith element from the front of the list takes θ(i) time, we show that move-to-front is within a constant factor of optimum among a wide class of list maintenance rules. Other natural heuristics, such as the transpose and frequency count rules, do not share this property. We generalize our results to show that move-to-front is within a constant factor of optimum as long as the access cost is a convex function. We also study paging, a setting in which the access cost is not convex. The paging rule corresponding to move-to-front is the “least recently used” (LRU) replacement rule. We analyze the amortized complexity of LRU, showing that its efficiency differs from that of the off-line paging rule (Belady's MIN algorithm) by a factor that depends on the size of fast memory. No on-line paging algorithm has better amortized performance.
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Daniel D. Sleator
AT&T (United States)
Robert E. Tarjan
AT&T (United States)
Communications of the ACM
AT&T (United States)
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Sleator et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0fdf8f42b7486443fe60d8 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1145/2786.2793