25 research outputs found

    Working Notes from the 1992 AAAI Spring Symposium on Practical Approaches to Scheduling and Planning

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    The symposium presented issues involved in the development of scheduling systems that can deal with resource and time limitations. To qualify, a system must be implemented and tested to some degree on non-trivial problems (ideally, on real-world problems). However, a system need not be fully deployed to qualify. Systems that schedule actions in terms of metric time constraints typically represent and reason about an external numeric clock or calendar and can be contrasted with those systems that represent time purely symbolically. The following topics are discussed: integrating planning and scheduling; integrating symbolic goals and numerical utilities; managing uncertainty; incremental rescheduling; managing limited computation time; anytime scheduling and planning algorithms, systems; dependency analysis and schedule reuse; management of schedule and plan execution; and incorporation of discrete event techniques

    The 1989 Goddard Conference on Space Applications of Artificial Intelligence

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    The following topics are addressed: mission operations support; planning and scheduling; fault isolation/diagnosis; image processing and machine vision; data management; and modeling and simulation

    Power-Aware Job Dispatching in High Performance Computing Systems

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    This works deals with the power-aware job dispatching problem in supercomputers; broadly speaking the dispatching consists of assigning finite capacity resources to a set of activities, with a special concern toward power and energy efficient solutions. We introduce novel optimization approaches to address its multiple aspects. The proposed techniques have a broad application range but are aimed at applications in the field of High Performance Computing (HPC) systems. Devising a power-aware HPC job dispatcher is a complex, where contrasting goals must be satisfied. Furthermore, the online nature of the problem request that solutions must be computed in real time respecting stringent limits. This aspect historically discouraged the usage of exact methods and favouring instead the adoption of heuristic techniques. The application of optimization approaches to the dispatching task is still an unexplored area of research and can drastically improve the performance of HPC systems. In this work we tackle the job dispatching problem on a real HPC machine, the Eurora supercomputer hosted at the Cineca research center, Bologna. We propose a Constraint Programming (CP) model that outperforms the dispatching software currently in use. An essential element to take power-aware decisions during the job dispatching phase is the possibility to estimate jobs power consumptions before their execution. To this end, we applied Machine Learning techniques to create a prediction model that was trained and tested on the Euora supercomputer, showing a great prediction accuracy. Then we finally develop a power-aware solution, considering the same target machine, and we devise different approaches to solve the dispatching problem while curtailing the power consumption of the whole system under a given threshold. We proposed a heuristic technique and a CP/heuristic hybrid method, both able to solve practical size instances and outperform the current state-of-the-art techniques

    Artificial general intelligence: Proceedings of the Second Conference on Artificial General Intelligence, AGI 2009, Arlington, Virginia, USA, March 6-9, 2009

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    Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) research focuses on the original and ultimate goal of AI – to create broad human-like and transhuman intelligence, by exploring all available paths, including theoretical and experimental computer science, cognitive science, neuroscience, and innovative interdisciplinary methodologies. Due to the difficulty of this task, for the last few decades the majority of AI researchers have focused on what has been called narrow AI – the production of AI systems displaying intelligence regarding specific, highly constrained tasks. In recent years, however, more and more researchers have recognized the necessity – and feasibility – of returning to the original goals of the field. Increasingly, there is a call for a transition back to confronting the more difficult issues of human level intelligence and more broadly artificial general intelligence

    Discrete Event Systems: Models and Applications; Proceedings of an IIASA Conference, Sopron, Hungary, August 3-7, 1987

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    Work in discrete event systems has just begun. There is a great deal of activity now, and much enthusiasm. There is considerable diversity reflecting differences in the intellectual formation of workers in the field and in the applications that guide their effort. This diversity is manifested in a proliferation of DEM formalisms. Some of the formalisms are essentially different. Some of the "new" formalisms are reinventions of existing formalisms presented in new terms. These "duplications" reveal both the new domains of intended application as well as the difficulty in keeping up with work that is published in journals on computer science, communications, signal processing, automatic control, and mathematical systems theory - to name the main disciplines with active research programs in discrete event systems. The first eight papers deal with models at the logical level, the next four are at the temporal level and the last six are at the stochastic level. Of these eighteen papers, three focus on manufacturing, four on communication networks, one on digital signal processing, the remaining ten papers address methodological issues ranging from simulation to computational complexity of some synthesis problems. The authors have made good efforts to make their contributions self-contained and to provide a representative bibliography. The volume should therefore be both accessible and useful to those who are just getting interested in discrete event systems

    Cooperative Radio Communications for Green Smart Environments

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    The demand for mobile connectivity is continuously increasing, and by 2020 Mobile and Wireless Communications will serve not only very dense populations of mobile phones and nomadic computers, but also the expected multiplicity of devices and sensors located in machines, vehicles, health systems and city infrastructures. Future Mobile Networks are then faced with many new scenarios and use cases, which will load the networks with different data traffic patterns, in new or shared spectrum bands, creating new specific requirements. This book addresses both the techniques to model, analyse and optimise the radio links and transmission systems in such scenarios, together with the most advanced radio access, resource management and mobile networking technologies. This text summarises the work performed by more than 500 researchers from more than 120 institutions in Europe, America and Asia, from both academia and industries, within the framework of the COST IC1004 Action on "Cooperative Radio Communications for Green and Smart Environments". The book will have appeal to graduates and researchers in the Radio Communications area, and also to engineers working in the Wireless industry. Topics discussed in this book include: • Radio waves propagation phenomena in diverse urban, indoor, vehicular and body environments• Measurements, characterization, and modelling of radio channels beyond 4G networks• Key issues in Vehicle (V2X) communication• Wireless Body Area Networks, including specific Radio Channel Models for WBANs• Energy efficiency and resource management enhancements in Radio Access Networks• Definitions and models for the virtualised and cloud RAN architectures• Advances on feasible indoor localization and tracking techniques• Recent findings and innovations in antenna systems for communications• Physical Layer Network Coding for next generation wireless systems• Methods and techniques for MIMO Over the Air (OTA) testin

    Cooperative Radio Communications for Green Smart Environments

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    The demand for mobile connectivity is continuously increasing, and by 2020 Mobile and Wireless Communications will serve not only very dense populations of mobile phones and nomadic computers, but also the expected multiplicity of devices and sensors located in machines, vehicles, health systems and city infrastructures. Future Mobile Networks are then faced with many new scenarios and use cases, which will load the networks with different data traffic patterns, in new or shared spectrum bands, creating new specific requirements. This book addresses both the techniques to model, analyse and optimise the radio links and transmission systems in such scenarios, together with the most advanced radio access, resource management and mobile networking technologies. This text summarises the work performed by more than 500 researchers from more than 120 institutions in Europe, America and Asia, from both academia and industries, within the framework of the COST IC1004 Action on "Cooperative Radio Communications for Green and Smart Environments". The book will have appeal to graduates and researchers in the Radio Communications area, and also to engineers working in the Wireless industry. Topics discussed in this book include: • Radio waves propagation phenomena in diverse urban, indoor, vehicular and body environments• Measurements, characterization, and modelling of radio channels beyond 4G networks• Key issues in Vehicle (V2X) communication• Wireless Body Area Networks, including specific Radio Channel Models for WBANs• Energy efficiency and resource management enhancements in Radio Access Networks• Definitions and models for the virtualised and cloud RAN architectures• Advances on feasible indoor localization and tracking techniques• Recent findings and innovations in antenna systems for communications• Physical Layer Network Coding for next generation wireless systems• Methods and techniques for MIMO Over the Air (OTA) testin

    Proceedings of the NASA Conference on Space Telerobotics, volume 2

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    These proceedings contain papers presented at the NASA Conference on Space Telerobotics held in Pasadena, January 31 to February 2, 1989. The theme of the Conference was man-machine collaboration in space. The Conference provided a forum for researchers and engineers to exchange ideas on the research and development required for application of telerobotics technology to the space systems planned for the 1990s and beyond. The Conference: (1) provided a view of current NASA telerobotic research and development; (2) stimulated technical exchange on man-machine systems, manipulator control, machine sensing, machine intelligence, concurrent computation, and system architectures; and (3) identified important unsolved problems of current interest which can be dealt with by future research

    Composing Approximated Algorithms Based on Hopfield Neural Network for Building a Resource-Bounded Scheduler

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    Abstract 2. Scheduling problem In previous work we have studied the Hopjield Artificial Neural Network model and its use for solving a particular scheduling problem: non pre-emptive tasks with release times, deadlines and computation times to be scheduled on several uniform machines. We presented an iterative approach based on Hopfield Networks which enables resource-bounded reasoning. We have validated our approach on a great number of randomly generated examples. Results are better than an efjicient scheduling heuristics when no timing constraint exists and our system is able to adapt its behavior when timing constraints are imposed by the application. In this papeG we extend this work by studying the incidence of two kinds of approximations on the processing time and on the success rate, so as to decide what sequence of activations for the contract will be likely to give the best success rate. 1. Hopfield Neural Network The Hopfield Model [2] is made up of a set of fully interconnected processing elements. The model relies on three major forms of parallel organization: parallel input channels, parallel output channels and parallel computation of the processing entities (called neurons). Each neuron has an external input, performs a weighted sum of all its inputs and applies a sigmoid function to the result to obtain a value in the interval [O,l]. The initial state of the network depends on the input. When new values of the neurons are computed, this temporary state evolves to reach a stable state, where all neurons remain constant (set to 0 or 1). This evolution corresponds to the minimization of the global energy of the net. It can be modeled by an energy function depending on the weights of the connections and the input values. Therefore, when an initial set of inputs is provided, the system converges to a stable state that minimizes the function

    Proceedings of the 21st Conference on Formal Methods in Computer-Aided Design – FMCAD 2021

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    The Conference on Formal Methods in Computer-Aided Design (FMCAD) is an annual conference on the theory and applications of formal methods in hardware and system verification. FMCAD provides a leading forum to researchers in academia and industry for presenting and discussing groundbreaking methods, technologies, theoretical results, and tools for reasoning formally about computing systems. FMCAD covers formal aspects of computer-aided system design including verification, specification, synthesis, and testing
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