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On the desirability of acyclic database schemes

by Catriel Beeri, Ronald Fagin, David Maier, Mihalis Yannakakis , 1983
"... A class of database schemes, called acychc, was recently introduced. It is shown that this class has a number of desirable properties. In particular, several desirable properties that have been studied by other researchers m very different terms are all shown to be eqmvalent to acydicity. In additi ..."
Abstract - Cited by 205 (2 self) - Add to MetaCart
. In addition, several equivalent charactenzauons of the class m terms of graphs and hypergraphs are given, and a smaple algorithm for determining acychclty is presented. Also given are several eqmvalent characterizations of those sets M of multivalued dependencies such that M is the set of mu

GMRES: A generalized minimal residual algorithm for solving nonsymmetric linear systems

by Youcef Saad, Martin H. Schultz - SIAM J. SCI. STAT. COMPUT , 1986
"... We present an iterative method for solving linear systems, which has the property ofminimizing at every step the norm of the residual vector over a Krylov subspace. The algorithm is derived from the Arnoldi process for constructing an l2-orthogonal basis of Krylov subspaces. It can be considered a ..."
Abstract - Cited by 2076 (41 self) - Add to MetaCart
as a generalization of Paige and Saunders’ MINRES algorithm and is theoretically equivalent to the Generalized Conjugate Residual (GCR) method and to ORTHODIR. The new algorithm presents several advantages over GCR and ORTHODIR.

Why a diagram is (sometimes) worth ten thousand words

by Jill H. Larkin - Cognitive Science , 1987
"... We distinguish diagrammatic from sentential paper-and-pencil representationsof information by developing alternative models of information-processing systems that are informationally equivalent and that can be characterized as sentential or diagrammatic. Sentential representations are sequential, li ..."
Abstract - Cited by 804 (2 self) - Add to MetaCart
We distinguish diagrammatic from sentential paper-and-pencil representationsof information by developing alternative models of information-processing systems that are informationally equivalent and that can be characterized as sentential or diagrammatic. Sentential representations are sequential

LSQR: An Algorithm for Sparse Linear Equations and Sparse Least Squares

by Christopher C. Paige, Michael A. Saunders - ACM Trans. Math. Software , 1982
"... An iterative method is given for solving Ax ~ffi b and minU Ax- b 112, where the matrix A is large and sparse. The method is based on the bidiagonalization procedure of Golub and Kahan. It is analytically equivalent to the standard method of conjugate gradients, but possesses more favorable numerica ..."
Abstract - Cited by 653 (21 self) - Add to MetaCart
An iterative method is given for solving Ax ~ffi b and minU Ax- b 112, where the matrix A is large and sparse. The method is based on the bidiagonalization procedure of Golub and Kahan. It is analytically equivalent to the standard method of conjugate gradients, but possesses more favorable

Training Linear SVMs in Linear Time

by Thorsten Joachims , 2006
"... Linear Support Vector Machines (SVMs) have become one of the most prominent machine learning techniques for high-dimensional sparse data commonly encountered in applications like text classification, word-sense disambiguation, and drug design. These applications involve a large number of examples n ..."
Abstract - Cited by 549 (6 self) - Add to MetaCart
is based on an alternative, but equivalent formulation of the SVM optimization problem. Empirically, the Cutting-Plane Algorithm is several orders of magnitude faster than decomposition methods like SVM-Light for large datasets.

ATOMIC DECOMPOSITION BY BASIS PURSUIT

by Scott Shaobing Chen , David L. Donoho , Michael A. Saunders , 1995
"... The Time-Frequency and Time-Scale communities have recently developed a large number of overcomplete waveform dictionaries -- stationary wavelets, wavelet packets, cosine packets, chirplets, and warplets, to name a few. Decomposition into overcomplete systems is not unique, and several methods for d ..."
Abstract - Cited by 2728 (61 self) - Add to MetaCart
The Time-Frequency and Time-Scale communities have recently developed a large number of overcomplete waveform dictionaries -- stationary wavelets, wavelet packets, cosine packets, chirplets, and warplets, to name a few. Decomposition into overcomplete systems is not unique, and several methods

The embryonic cell lineage of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans

by J. E. Sulston, H. R. Horvitz - Dev. Biol , 1983
"... The number of nongonadal nuclei in the free-living soil nematode Caenorhabditis elegans increases from about 550 in the newly hatched larva to about 810 in the mature hermaphrodite and to about 970 in the mature male. The pattern of cell divisions which leads to this increase is essentially invarian ..."
Abstract - Cited by 540 (19 self) - Add to MetaCart
. Frequently, several blast cells follow the same asymmetric program of divisions; lineally equivalent progeny of such cells generally differen-tiate into functionally equivalent cells. We have determined these cell lineages by direct observation of the divisions, migrations, and deaths of individual cells

A calculus of mobile processes, I

by Robin Milner, et al. , 1992
"... We present the a-calculus, a calculus of communicating systems in which one can naturally express processes which have changing structure. Not only may the component agents of a system be arbitrarily linked, but a communication between neighbours may carry information which changes that linkage. The ..."
Abstract - Cited by 1184 (31 self) - Add to MetaCart
, and computation is represented purely as the communication of names across links. After an illustrated description of how the n-calculus generalises conventional process algebras in treating mobility, several examples exploiting mobility are given in some detail. The important examples are the encoding into the n

Homological Algebra of Mirror Symmetry

by Maxim Kontsevich - in Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians , 1994
"... Mirror Symmetry was discovered several years ago in string theory as a duality between families of 3-dimensional Calabi-Yau manifolds (more precisely, complex algebraic manifolds possessing holomorphic volume elements without zeroes). The name comes from the symmetry among Hodge numbers. For dual Ca ..."
Abstract - Cited by 523 (3 self) - Add to MetaCart
Mirror Symmetry was discovered several years ago in string theory as a duality between families of 3-dimensional Calabi-Yau manifolds (more precisely, complex algebraic manifolds possessing holomorphic volume elements without zeroes). The name comes from the symmetry among Hodge numbers. For dual

Loopy belief propagation for approximate inference: An empirical study. In:

by Kevin P Murphy , Yair Weiss , Michael I Jordan - Proceedings of Uncertainty in AI, , 1999
"... Abstract Recently, researchers have demonstrated that "loopy belief propagation" -the use of Pearl's polytree algorithm in a Bayesian network with loops -can perform well in the context of error-correcting codes. The most dramatic instance of this is the near Shannon-limit performanc ..."
Abstract - Cited by 676 (15 self) - Add to MetaCart
-limit performance of "Turbo Codes" -codes whose decoding algorithm is equivalent to loopy belief propagation in a chain-structured Bayesian network. In this paper we ask: is there something spe cial about the error-correcting code context, or does loopy propagation work as an ap proximate inference scheme
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