9,986 research outputs found
A Declarative Semantics for CLP with Qualification and Proximity
Uncertainty in Logic Programming has been investigated during the last
decades, dealing with various extensions of the classical LP paradigm and
different applications. Existing proposals rely on different approaches, such
as clause annotations based on uncertain truth values, qualification values as
a generalization of uncertain truth values, and unification based on proximity
relations. On the other hand, the CLP scheme has established itself as a
powerful extension of LP that supports efficient computation over specialized
domains while keeping a clean declarative semantics. In this paper we propose a
new scheme SQCLP designed as an extension of CLP that supports qualification
values and proximity relations. We show that several previous proposals can be
viewed as particular cases of the new scheme, obtained by partial
instantiation. We present a declarative semantics for SQCLP that is based on
observables, providing fixpoint and proof-theoretical characterizations of
least program models as well as an implementation-independent notion of goal
solutions.Comment: 17 pages, 26th Int'l. Conference on Logic Programming (ICLP'10
Soft Concurrent Constraint Programming
Soft constraints extend classical constraints to represent multiple
consistency levels, and thus provide a way to express preferences, fuzziness,
and uncertainty. While there are many soft constraint solving formalisms, even
distributed ones, by now there seems to be no concurrent programming framework
where soft constraints can be handled. In this paper we show how the classical
concurrent constraint (cc) programming framework can work with soft
constraints, and we also propose an extension of cc languages which can use
soft constraints to prune and direct the search for a solution. We believe that
this new programming paradigm, called soft cc (scc), can be also very useful in
many web-related scenarios. In fact, the language level allows web agents to
express their interaction and negotiation protocols, and also to post their
requests in terms of preferences, and the underlying soft constraint solver can
find an agreement among the agents even if their requests are incompatible.Comment: 25 pages, 4 figures, submitted to the ACM Transactions on
Computational Logic (TOCL), zipped file
Towards a Unified Framework for Declarative Structured Communications
We present a unified framework for the declarative analysis of structured
communications. By relying on a (timed) concurrent constraint programming
language, we show that in addition to the usual operational techniques from
process calculi, the analysis of structured communications can elegantly
exploit logic-based reasoning techniques. We introduce a declarative
interpretation of the language for structured communications proposed by Honda,
Vasconcelos, and Kubo. Distinguishing features of our approach are: the
possibility of including partial information (constraints) in the session
model; the use of explicit time for reasoning about session duration and
expiration; a tight correspondence with logic, which formally relates session
execution and linear-time temporal logic formulas
A Transformation-based Implementation for CLP with Qualification and Proximity
Uncertainty in logic programming has been widely investigated in the last
decades, leading to multiple extensions of the classical LP paradigm. However,
few of these are designed as extensions of the well-established and powerful
CLP scheme for Constraint Logic Programming. In a previous work we have
proposed the SQCLP (proximity-based qualified constraint logic programming)
scheme as a quite expressive extension of CLP with support for qualification
values and proximity relations as generalizations of uncertainty values and
similarity relations, respectively. In this paper we provide a transformation
technique for transforming SQCLP programs and goals into semantically
equivalent CLP programs and goals, and a practical Prolog-based implementation
of some particularly useful instances of the SQCLP scheme. We also illustrate,
by showing some simple-and working-examples, how the prototype can be
effectively used as a tool for solving problems where qualification values and
proximity relations play a key role. Intended use of SQCLP includes flexible
information retrieval applications.Comment: 49 pages, 5 figures, 1 table, preliminary version of an article of
the same title, published as Technical Report SIC-4-10, Universidad
Complutense, Departamento de Sistemas Inform\'aticos y Computaci\'on, Madrid,
Spai
Partial Order Reduction for Security Protocols
Security protocols are concurrent processes that communicate using
cryptography with the aim of achieving various security properties. Recent work
on their formal verification has brought procedures and tools for deciding
trace equivalence properties (e.g., anonymity, unlinkability, vote secrecy) for
a bounded number of sessions. However, these procedures are based on a naive
symbolic exploration of all traces of the considered processes which,
unsurprisingly, greatly limits the scalability and practical impact of the
verification tools.
In this paper, we overcome this difficulty by developing partial order
reduction techniques for the verification of security protocols. We provide
reduced transition systems that optimally eliminate redundant traces, and which
are adequate for model-checking trace equivalence properties of protocols by
means of symbolic execution. We have implemented our reductions in the tool
Apte, and demonstrated that it achieves the expected speedup on various
protocols
Parameter Learning of Logic Programs for Symbolic-Statistical Modeling
We propose a logical/mathematical framework for statistical parameter
learning of parameterized logic programs, i.e. definite clause programs
containing probabilistic facts with a parameterized distribution. It extends
the traditional least Herbrand model semantics in logic programming to
distribution semantics, possible world semantics with a probability
distribution which is unconditionally applicable to arbitrary logic programs
including ones for HMMs, PCFGs and Bayesian networks. We also propose a new EM
algorithm, the graphical EM algorithm, that runs for a class of parameterized
logic programs representing sequential decision processes where each decision
is exclusive and independent. It runs on a new data structure called support
graphs describing the logical relationship between observations and their
explanations, and learns parameters by computing inside and outside probability
generalized for logic programs. The complexity analysis shows that when
combined with OLDT search for all explanations for observations, the graphical
EM algorithm, despite its generality, has the same time complexity as existing
EM algorithms, i.e. the Baum-Welch algorithm for HMMs, the Inside-Outside
algorithm for PCFGs, and the one for singly connected Bayesian networks that
have been developed independently in each research field. Learning experiments
with PCFGs using two corpora of moderate size indicate that the graphical EM
algorithm can significantly outperform the Inside-Outside algorithm
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