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A note on tractability and artificial intelligence
The recognition that human minds/brains are finite systems with limited resources for computation has led researchers in Cognitive Science to advance the Tractable Cognition thesis: Human cognitive capacities are constrained by computational tractability. As also artificial intelligence (AI) in its attempt to recreate intelligence and capacities inspired by the human mind is dealing with finite systems, transferring the Tractable Cognition thesis into this new context and adapting it accordingly may give rise to insights and ideas that can help in progressing towards meeting the goals of the AI endeavor
Parameterized Algorithmics for Computational Social Choice: Nine Research Challenges
Computational Social Choice is an interdisciplinary research area involving
Economics, Political Science, and Social Science on the one side, and
Mathematics and Computer Science (including Artificial Intelligence and
Multiagent Systems) on the other side. Typical computational problems studied
in this field include the vulnerability of voting procedures against attacks,
or preference aggregation in multi-agent systems. Parameterized Algorithmics is
a subfield of Theoretical Computer Science seeking to exploit meaningful
problem-specific parameters in order to identify tractable special cases of in
general computationally hard problems. In this paper, we propose nine of our
favorite research challenges concerning the parameterized complexity of
problems appearing in this context
Tractability through Exchangeability: A New Perspective on Efficient Probabilistic Inference
Exchangeability is a central notion in statistics and probability theory. The
assumption that an infinite sequence of data points is exchangeable is at the
core of Bayesian statistics. However, finite exchangeability as a statistical
property that renders probabilistic inference tractable is less
well-understood. We develop a theory of finite exchangeability and its relation
to tractable probabilistic inference. The theory is complementary to that of
independence and conditional independence. We show that tractable inference in
probabilistic models with high treewidth and millions of variables can be
understood using the notion of finite (partial) exchangeability. We also show
that existing lifted inference algorithms implicitly utilize a combination of
conditional independence and partial exchangeability.Comment: In Proceedings of the 28th AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligenc
Structural Decompositions for Problems with Global Constraints
A wide range of problems can be modelled as constraint satisfaction problems
(CSPs), that is, a set of constraints that must be satisfied simultaneously.
Constraints can either be represented extensionally, by explicitly listing
allowed combinations of values, or implicitly, by special-purpose algorithms
provided by a solver.
Such implicitly represented constraints, known as global constraints, are
widely used; indeed, they are one of the key reasons for the success of
constraint programming in solving real-world problems. In recent years, a
variety of restrictions on the structure of CSP instances have been shown to
yield tractable classes of CSPs. However, most such restrictions fail to
guarantee tractability for CSPs with global constraints. We therefore study the
applicability of structural restrictions to instances with such constraints.
We show that when the number of solutions to a CSP instance is bounded in key
parts of the problem, structural restrictions can be used to derive new
tractable classes. Furthermore, we show that this result extends to
combinations of instances drawn from known tractable classes, as well as to CSP
instances where constraints assign costs to satisfying assignments.Comment: The final publication is available at Springer via
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10601-015-9181-
Exchangeable Variable Models
A sequence of random variables is exchangeable if its joint distribution is
invariant under variable permutations. We introduce exchangeable variable
models (EVMs) as a novel class of probabilistic models whose basic building
blocks are partially exchangeable sequences, a generalization of exchangeable
sequences. We prove that a family of tractable EVMs is optimal under zero-one
loss for a large class of functions, including parity and threshold functions,
and strictly subsumes existing tractable independence-based model families.
Extensive experiments show that EVMs outperform state of the art classifiers
such as SVMs and probabilistic models which are solely based on independence
assumptions.Comment: ICML 201
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