10,651 research outputs found

    Strengthening Canonical Pattern Databases with Structural Symmetries

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    Symmetry-based state space pruning techniques have proved to greatly improve heuristic search based classical planners. Similarly, abstraction heuristics in general and pattern databases in particular are key ingredients of such planners. However, only little work has dealt with how the abstraction heuristics behave under symmetries. In this work, we investigate the symmetry properties of the popular canonical pattern databases heuristic. Exploiting structural symmetries, we strengthen the canonical pattern databases by adding symmetric pattern databases, making the resulting heuristic invariant under structural symmetry, thus making it especially attractive for symmetry-based pruning search methods. Further, we prove that this heuristic is at least as informative as using symmetric lookups over the original heuristic. An experimental evaluation confirms these theoretical results

    Taming Numbers and Durations in the Model Checking Integrated Planning System

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    The Model Checking Integrated Planning System (MIPS) is a temporal least commitment heuristic search planner based on a flexible object-oriented workbench architecture. Its design clearly separates explicit and symbolic directed exploration algorithms from the set of on-line and off-line computed estimates and associated data structures. MIPS has shown distinguished performance in the last two international planning competitions. In the last event the description language was extended from pure propositional planning to include numerical state variables, action durations, and plan quality objective functions. Plans were no longer sequences of actions but time-stamped schedules. As a participant of the fully automated track of the competition, MIPS has proven to be a general system; in each track and every benchmark domain it efficiently computed plans of remarkable quality. This article introduces and analyzes the most important algorithmic novelties that were necessary to tackle the new layers of expressiveness in the benchmark problems and to achieve a high level of performance. The extensions include critical path analysis of sequentially generated plans to generate corresponding optimal parallel plans. The linear time algorithm to compute the parallel plan bypasses known NP hardness results for partial ordering by scheduling plans with respect to the set of actions and the imposed precedence relations. The efficiency of this algorithm also allows us to improve the exploration guidance: for each encountered planning state the corresponding approximate sequential plan is scheduled. One major strength of MIPS is its static analysis phase that grounds and simplifies parameterized predicates, functions and operators, that infers knowledge to minimize the state description length, and that detects domain object symmetries. The latter aspect is analyzed in detail. MIPS has been developed to serve as a complete and optimal state space planner, with admissible estimates, exploration engines and branching cuts. In the competition version, however, certain performance compromises had to be made, including floating point arithmetic, weighted heuristic search exploration according to an inadmissible estimate and parameterized optimization

    Lattice Gauge Theories at the Energy Frontier

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    This White Paper has been prepared as a planning document for the Division of High Energy Physics of the U. S. Department of Energy. Recent progress in lattice-based studies of physics beyond the standard model is summarized, and major current goals of USQCD research in this area are presented. Challenges and opportunities associated with the recently discovered 126 GeV Higgs-like particle are highlighted. Computational resources needed for reaching important goals are described. The document was finalized on February 11, 2013 with references that are not aimed to be complete, or account for an accurate historical record of the field.Comment: Submitted for the Snowmass 2013 e-Proceedings with 44 pages, 10 figures, and 3 table

    Star-Topology Decoupling in SPIN

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    Star-topology decoupled state-space search in AI planning and model checking

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    State-space search is a widely employed concept in many areas of computer science. The well-known state explosion problem, however, imposes a severe limitation to the effective implementation of search in state spaces that are exponential in the size of a compact system description, which captures the state-transition semantics. Decoupled state-space search, decoupled search for short, is a novel approach to tackle the state explosion. It decomposes the system such that the dependencies between components take the form of a star topology with a center and several leaf components. Decoupled search exploits that the leaves in that topology are conditionally independent. Such independence naturally arises in many kinds of factored model representations, where the overall state space results from the product of several system components. In this work, we introduce decoupled search in the context of artificial intelligence planning and formal verification using model checking. Building on common formalisms, we develop the concept of the decoupled state space and prove its correctness with respect to capturing reachability of the underlying model exactly. This allows us to connect decoupled search to any search algorithm, and, important for planning, adapt any heuristic function to the decoupled state representation. Such heuristics then guide the search towards states that satisfy a desired goal condition. In model checking, we address the problems of verifying safety properties, which express system states that must never occur, and liveness properties, that must hold in any infinite system execution. Many approaches have been proposed in the past to tackle the state explosion problem. Most prominently partial-order reduction, symmetry breaking, Petri-net unfolding, and symbolic state representations. Like decoupled search, all of these are capable of exponentially reducing the search effort, either by pruning part of the state space (the former two), or by representing large state sets compactly (the latter two). For all these techniques, we prove that decoupled search can be exponentially more efficient, confirming that it is indeed a novel concept that exploits model properties in a unique way. Given such orthogonality, we combine decoupled search with several complementary methods. Empirically, we show that decoupled search favourably compares to state-of-the-art planners in common algorithmic planning problems using standard benchmarks. In model checking, decoupled search outperforms well-established tools, both in the context of the verification of safety and liveness properties.Die Zustandsraumsuche ist ein weit verbreitetes Konzept in vielen Bereichen der Informatik, deren effektive Anwendung jedoch durch das Problem der Zustandsexplosion deutlich erschwert wird. Die Zustandsexplosion ist dadurch charakterisiert dass kompakte Systemmodelle exponentiell große Zustandsräume beschreiben. Entkoppelte Zustandsraumsuche (entkoppelte Suche) beschreibt einen neuartigen Ansatz der Zustandsexplosion entgegenzuwirken indem die Struktur des Modells, insbesondere die bedingte Unabhängigkeit von Systemkomponenten in einer Sterntopologie, ausgenutzt wird. Diese Unabhängigkeit ergibt sich bei vielen faktorisierten Modellen deren Zustandsraum sich aus dem Produkt mehrerer Komponenten zusammensetzt. In dieser Arbeit wird die entkoppelte Suche in der Planung, als Teil der Künstlichen Intelligenz, und der Verifikation mittels Modellprüfung eingeführt. In etablierten Formalismen wird das Konzept des entkoppelten Zustandsraums entwickelt und dessen Korrektheit bezüglich der exakten Erfassung der Erreichbarkeit von Modellzuständen bewiesen. Dies ermöglicht die Kombination der entkoppelten Suche mit beliebigen Suchalgorithmen. Wichtig für die Planung ist zudem die Nutzung von Heuristiken, die die Suche zu Zuständen führen, die eine gewünschte Zielbedingung erfüllen, mit der entkoppelten Zustandsdarstellung. Im Teil zur Modellprüfung wird die Verifikation von Sicherheits- sowie Lebendigkeitseigenschaften betrachtet, die unerwünschte Zustände, bzw. Eigenschaften, die bei unendlicher Systemausführung gelten müssen, beschreiben. Es existieren diverse Ansätze um die Zustandsexplosion anzugehen. Am bekanntesten sind die Reduktion partieller Ordnung, Symmetriereduktion, Entfaltung von Petri-Netzen und symbolische Suche. Diese können, wie die entkoppelte Suche, den Suchaufwand exponentiell reduzieren. Dies geschieht durch Beschneidung eines Teils des Zustandsraums, oder durch die kompakte Darstellung großer Zustandsmengen. Für diese Verfahren wird bewiesen, dass die entkoppelte Suche exponentiell effizienter sein kann. Dies belegt dass es sich um ein neuartiges Konzept handelt, das sich auf eigene Art der Modelleigenschaften bedient. Auf Basis dieser Beobachtung werden, mit Ausnahme der Entfaltung, Kombinationen mit entkoppelter Suche entwickelt. Empirisch kann die entkoppelte Suche im Vergleich zu modernen Planern zu deutlichen Vorteilen führen. In der Modellprüfung werden, sowohl bei der Überprüfung von Sicherheit-, als auch Lebendigkeitseigenschaften, etablierte Programme übertroffen.Deutsche Forschungsgesellschaft; Star-Topology Decoupled State Space Searc

    Merge-and-shrink abstractions for classical planning : theory, strategies, and implementation

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    Classical planning is the problem of finding a sequence of deterministic actions in a state space that lead from an initial state to a state satisfying some goal condition. The dominant approach to optimally solve planning tasks is heuristic search, in particular A* search combined with an admissible heuristic. While there exist many different admissible heuristics, we focus on abstraction heuristics in this thesis, and in particular, on the well-established merge-and-shrink heuristics. Our main theoretical contribution is to provide a comprehensive description of the merge-and-shrink framework in terms of transformations of transition systems. Unlike previous accounts, our description is fully compositional, i.e. can be understood by understanding each transformation in isolation. In particular, in addition to the name-giving merge and shrink transformations, we also describe pruning and label reduction as such transformations. The latter is based on generalized label reduction, a new theory that removes all of the restrictions of the previous definition of label reduction. We study the four types of transformations in terms of desirable formal properties and explain how these properties transfer to heuristics being admissible and consistent or even perfect. We also describe an optimized implementation of the merge-and-shrink framework that substantially improves the efficiency compared to previous implementations. Furthermore, we investigate the expressive power of merge-and-shrink abstractions by analyzing factored mappings, the data structure they use for representing functions. In particular, we show that there exist certain families of functions that can be compactly represented by so-called non-linear factored mappings but not by linear ones. On the practical side, we contribute several non-linear merge strategies to the merge-and-shrink toolbox. In particular, we adapt a merge strategy from model checking to planning, provide a framework to enhance existing merge strategies based on symmetries, devise a simple score-based merge strategy that minimizes the maximum size of transition systems of the merge-and-shrink computation, and describe another framework to enhance merge strategies based on an analysis of causal dependencies of the planning task. In a large experimental study, we show the evolution of the performance of merge-and-shrink heuristics on planning benchmarks. Starting with the state of the art before the contributions of this thesis, we subsequently evaluate all of our techniques and show that state-of-the-art non-linear merge-and-shrink heuristics improve significantly over the previous state of the art

    Towards 40 years of constraint reasoning

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    Research on constraints started in the early 1970s. We are approaching 40 years since the beginning of this successful field, and it is an opportunity to revise what has been reached. This paper is a personal view of the accomplishments in this field. We summarize the main achievements along three dimensions: constraint solving, modelling and programming. We devote special attention to constraint solving, covering popular topics such as search, inference (especially arc consistency), combination of search and inference, symmetry exploitation, global constraints and extensions to the classical model. For space reasons, several topics have been deliberately omitted.Partially supported by the Spanish project TIN2009-13591-C02-02 and Generalitat de Catalunya grant 2009-SGR-1434.Peer Reviewe
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