Journal of Computational and Applied Mathematics - Special issue: Approximation theory, wavelets, and numerical analysis
Vector cascade algorithms and refinable function vectors in Sobolev spaces
Journal of Approximation Theory
Designing composite triangular subdivision schemes
Computer Aided Geometric Design - Special issue: Geometric modelling and differential geometry
C2 subdivision over triangulations with one extraordinary point
Computer Aided Geometric Design
Construction of biorthogonal wavelets from pseudo-splines
Journal of Approximation Theory
C2 subdivision over triangulations with one extraordinary point
Computer Aided Geometric Design
Designing composite triangular subdivision schemes
Computer Aided Geometric Design - Special issue: Geometric modelling and differential geometry
Construction of biorthogonal wavelets from pseudo-splines
Journal of Approximation Theory
Journal of Approximation Theory
Decompositions of trigonometric polynomials with applications to multivariate subdivision schemes
Advances in Computational Mathematics
Journal of Approximation Theory
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Smoothness and symmetry are two important properties of a refinable function. It is known that the Sobolev smoothness exponent of a refinable function can be estimated by computing the spectral radius of a certain finite matrix which is generated from a mask. However, the increase of dimension and the support of a mask tremendously increase the size of the matrix and therefore make the computation very expensive. In this paper, we shall present a simple and efficient algorithm for the numerical computation of the smoothness exponent of a symmetric refinable function with a general dilation matrix. By taking into account the symmetry of a refinable function, our algorithm greatly reduces the size of the matrix and enables us to numerically compute the Sobolev smoothness exponents of a large class of symmetric refinable functions. Step-by-step numerically stable algorithms are given. To illustrate our results by performing some numerical experiments, we construct a family of dyadic interpolatory masks in any dimension, and we compute the smoothness exponents of their refinable functions in dimension three. Several examples will also be presented for computing smoothness exponents of symmetric refinable functions on the quincunx lattice and on the hexagonal lattice.