Open AccessBook
Complexity theory of real functions
Ker-I Ko
- 01 Jan 1991
640
TL;DR: " polynomial complexity theory extends the notions and tools of the theory of computability to provide a solid theoretical foundation for the study of computational complexity of practical problems.
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Abstract: Starting with Cook's pioneering work on NP-completeness in 1970, polynomial complexity theory, the study of polynomial-time com putability, has quickly emerged as the new foundation of algorithms. On the one hand, it bridges the gap between the abstract approach of recursive function theory and the concrete approach of analysis of algorithms. It extends the notions and tools of the theory of computability to provide a solid theoretical foundation for the study of computational complexity of practical problems. In addition, the theoretical studies of the notion of polynomial-time tractability some times also yield interesting new practical algorithms. A typical exam ple is the application of the ellipsoid algorithm to combinatorial op timization problems (see, for example, Lovasz [1986]). On the other hand, it has a strong influence on many different branches of mathe matics, including combinatorial optimization, graph theory, number theory and cryptography. As a consequence, many researchers have begun to re-examine various branches of classical mathematics from the complexity point of view. For a given nonconstructive existence theorem in classical mathematics, one would like to find a construc tive proof which admits a polynomial-time algorithm for the solution. One of the examples is the recent work on algorithmic theory of per mutation groups. In the area of numerical computation, there are also two tradi tionally independent approaches: recursive analysis and numerical analysis."
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Citations
Two Algorithms in Search of a Type-System
Norman Danner,James S. Royer +1 more
TL;DR: The authors of as discussed by the authors extended the original call-by-value type system to include affine recursion schemes, such as insertion-and selection-sort algorithms, and showed that these new recursions do not lead out of the realm of feasibility, thus overcoming a sticking point of most prior implicit complexity-based formalisms.
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Relaxed Decidability and the Robust Semantics of Metric Temporal Logic
Houssam Abbas,Matthew O'Kelly,Rahul Mangharam +2 more
- 13 Apr 2017
TL;DR: This paper establishes a formal equivalence between the robustness degree of MTL specifications, and the imprecision parameter delta used in delta-decidability when it is used to verify MTL properties, and presents an application of this result in the form of an algorithm that generates new constraints to the Delta-decision procedure from falsification runs, which can speed up the verification run.
A comparison of identification criteria for inductive inference of recursive real-valued functions
Eiju Hirowatari,Setsuo Arikawa +1 more
- 08 Oct 1998
TL;DR: The learning model considered is an extension of Gold's inductive inference, and it is shown that every recursively enumerable class of recursive real-valued functions on a fixed rational interval is consistently inferable in the limit.
6
Towards Soft Exact Computation (Invited Talk)
Chee Yap
- 26 Aug 2019
TL;DR: A bird’s eye view of the recent work with collaborators in two principle areas: computing zero sets and robot path planning and a systematic pathway to go from the abstract algorithmic description to an effective algorithm in the subdivision framework are discussed.
6
On the encoding complexity of scalar quantizers
Dennis Hui,D.L. Neuhoff +1 more
- 17 Sep 1995
TL;DR: It is shown that as rate increases the problem of asymptotically optimal scalar quantization has polynomial-time encoding complexity if the distribution function corresponding to the one-third power of the source density is polynogeneous-time (or space) computable in the Turing sense.
6
References
•Book
Introduction to Automata Theory, Languages, and Computation
John E. Hopcroft,Rajeev Motwani,Rotwani,Jeffrey D. Ullman +3 more
- 01 Jan 1979
TL;DR: This book is a rigorous exposition of formal languages and models of computation, with an introduction to computational complexity, appropriate for upper-level computer science undergraduates who are comfortable with mathematical arguments.
14.5K
On Computable Numbers, with an Application to the Entscheidungsproblem
TL;DR: This chapter discusses the application of the diagonal process of the universal computing machine, which automates the calculation of circle and circle-free numbers.
The complexity of theorem-proving procedures
Stephen A. Cook
- 03 May 1971
TL;DR: It is shown that any recognition problem solved by a polynomial time-bounded nondeterministic Turing machine can be “reduced” to the problem of determining whether a given propositional formula is a tautology.
7.4K
A new polynomial-time algorithm for linear programming
Narendra Karmarkar
- 01 Dec 1984
TL;DR: The algorithm consists of repeated application of such projective transformations each followed by optimization over an inscribed sphere to create a sequence of points which converges to the optimal solution in polynomial-time.
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