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Planning as satisfiability

by Henry Kautz, Bart Selman - IN ECAI-92 , 1992
"... We develop a formal model of planning based on satisfiability rather than deduction. The satis ability approach not only provides a more flexible framework for stating di erent kinds of constraints on plans, but also more accurately reflects the theory behind modern constraint-based planning systems ..."
Abstract - Cited by 505 (27 self) - Add to MetaCart
We develop a formal model of planning based on satisfiability rather than deduction. The satis ability approach not only provides a more flexible framework for stating di erent kinds of constraints on plans, but also more accurately reflects the theory behind modern constraint-based planning

The nas parallel benchmarks

by D. H. Bailey, E. Barszcz, J. T. Barton, D. S. Browning, R. L. Carter, R. A. Fatoohi, P. O. Frederickson, T. A. Lasinski, H. D. Simon, V. Venkatakrishnan, S. K. Weeratunga - The International Journal of Supercomputer Applications , 1991
"... A new set of benchmarks has been developed for the performance evaluation of highly parallel supercomputers. These benchmarks consist of ve \parallel kernel " benchmarks and three \simulated application" benchmarks. Together they mimic the computation and data movement characterist ..."
Abstract - Cited by 694 (9 self) - Add to MetaCart
characteristics of large scale computational uid dynamics applications. The principal distinguishing feature of these benchmarks is their \pencil and paper " speci cation | all details of these benchmarks are speci ed only algorithmically. In this way many of the di culties associated with conventional

Features of similarity.

by Amos Tversky - Psychological Review , 1977
"... Similarity plays a fundamental role in theories of knowledge and behavior. It serves as an organizing principle by which individuals classify objects, form concepts, and make generalizations. Indeed, the concept of similarity is ubiquitous in psychological theory. It underlies the accounts of stimu ..."
Abstract - Cited by 1455 (2 self) - Add to MetaCart
of stimulus and response generalization in learning, it is employed to explain errors in memory and pattern recognition, and it is central to the analysis of connotative meaning. Similarity or dissimilarity data appear in di¤erent forms: ratings of pairs, sorting of objects, communality between associations

Extracting patterns and relations from the world wide web

by Sergey Brin - In WebDB Workshop at 6th International Conference on Extending Database Technology, EDBT’98 , 1998
"... Abstract. The World Wide Web is a vast resource for information. At the same time it is extremely distributed. A particular type of data such as restaurant lists may be scattered across thousands of independent information sources in many di erent formats. In this paper, we consider the problem of e ..."
Abstract - Cited by 471 (1 self) - Add to MetaCart
Abstract. The World Wide Web is a vast resource for information. At the same time it is extremely distributed. A particular type of data such as restaurant lists may be scattered across thousands of independent information sources in many di erent formats. In this paper, we consider the problem

Bullet: High Bandwidth Data Dissemination Using an Overlay Mesh

by Dejan Kostic, Adolfo Rodriguez, Jeannie Albrecht, Amin Vahdat , 2003
"... In recent years, overlay networks have become an effective alternative to IP multicast for efficient point to multipoint communication across the Internet. Typically, nodes self-organize with the goal of forming an efficient overlay tree, one that meets performance targets without placing undue burd ..."
Abstract - Cited by 424 (22 self) - Add to MetaCart
should be distributed in a disjoint manner to strategic points in the network. Individual Bullet receivers are then responsible for locating and retrieving the data from multiple points in parallel. Key contributions of this work include: i) an algorithm that sends data to di#erent points in the overlay

Prioritized sweeping: Reinforcement learning with less data and less time

by Andrew W. Moore, Christopher G. Atkeson - Machine Learning , 1993
"... We present a new algorithm, Prioritized Sweeping, for e cient prediction and control of stochas-tic Markov systems. Incremental learning methods such asTemporal Di erencing and Q-learning have fast real time performance. Classical methods are slower, but more accurate, because they make full use of ..."
Abstract - Cited by 378 (6 self) - Add to MetaCart
of the observations. Prioritized Sweeping aims for the best of both worlds. It uses all previous experiences both to prioritize important dynamic programming sweeps and to guide the exploration of state-space. We compare Prioritized Sweeping with other reinforcement learning schemes for a number of di erent

Segmentation using eigenvectors: A unifying view

by Yair Weiss - In ICCV , 1999
"... Automatic grouping and segmentation of images remains a challenging problem in computer vision. Recently, a number of authors have demonstrated good performance on this task using methods that are based on eigenvectors of the a nity matrix. These approaches are extremely attractive in that they are ..."
Abstract - Cited by 380 (1 self) - Add to MetaCart
highlighting their distinguishing features. We then prove results on eigenvectors of block matrices that allow us to analyze the performance of these algorithms in simple grouping settings. Finally, we use our analysis to motivate a variation on the existing methods that combines aspects from di erent

Index Structures for Path Expressions

by Tova Milo, Dan Suciu , 1997
"... In recent years there has been an increased interest in managing data which does not conform to traditional data models, like the relational or object oriented model. The reasons for this non-conformance are diverse. One one hand, data may not conform to such models at the physical level: it may be ..."
Abstract - Cited by 333 (7 self) - Add to MetaCart
be stored in data exchange formats, fetched from the Internet, or stored as structured les. One the other hand, it may not conform at the logical level: data may have missing attributes, some attributes may be of di erent types in di erent data items, there may be heterogeneous collections, or the data may

The state of the art in distributed query processing

by Donald Kossmann - ACM Computing Surveys , 2000
"... Distributed data processing is fast becoming a reality. Businesses want to have it for many reasons, and they often must have it in order to stay competitive. While much of the infrastructure for distributed data processing is already in place (e.g., modern network technology), there are a number of ..."
Abstract - Cited by 320 (3 self) - Add to MetaCart
to exploit intra-query parallelism, techniques to reduce communication costs, and techniques to exploit caching and replication of data. Furthermore, the paper discusses di erent kinds of distributed systems such as client-server, middleware (multi-tier), and heterogeneous database systems and shows how

Wavelet shrinkage: asymptopia

by David L. Donoho, Iain M. Johnstone, Gerard Kerkyacharian, Dominique Picard - Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Ser. B , 1995
"... Considerable e ort has been directed recently to develop asymptotically minimax methods in problems of recovering in nite-dimensional objects (curves, densities, spectral densities, images) from noisy data. A rich and complex body of work has evolved, with nearly- or exactly- minimax estimators bein ..."
Abstract - Cited by 295 (36 self) - Add to MetaCart
for curve estimation based on n noisy data; one translates the empirical wavelet coe cients towards the origin by an amount p p 2 log(n) = n. The method is di erent from methods in common use today, is computationally practical, and is spatially adaptive; thus it avoids a number of previous objections
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