261,440 research outputs found
Distributed workload control for federated service discovery
The diffusion of the internet paradigm in each aspect of human life continuously fosters the widespread of new technologies and related services. In the Future Internet scenario, where 5G telecommunication facilities will interact with the internet of things world, analyzing in real time big amounts of data to feed a potential infinite set of services belonging to different administrative domains, the role of a federated service discovery will become crucial. In this paper the authors propose a distributed workload control algorithm to handle efficiently the service discovery requests, with the aim of minimizing the overall latencies experienced by the requesting user agents. The authors propose an algorithm based on the Wardrop equilibrium, which is a gametheoretical concept, applied to the federated service discovery domain. The proposed solution has been implemented and its performance has been assessed adopting different network topologies and metrics. An open source simulation environment has been created allowing other researchers to test the proposed solution
Computability and analysis: the legacy of Alan Turing
We discuss the legacy of Alan Turing and his impact on computability and
analysis.Comment: 49 page
Index to Library Trends Volume 38
published or submitted for publicatio
An Example of Pi^0_3-complete Infinitary Rational Relation
We give in this paper an example of infinitary rational relation, accepted by
a 2-tape B\"{u}chi automaton, which is Pi^0_3-complete in the Borel hierarchy.
Moreover the example of infinitary rational relation given in this paper has a
very simple structure and can be easily described by its sections
Dichotomy Results for Fixed Point Counting in Boolean Dynamical Systems
We present dichotomy theorems regarding the computational complexity of
counting fixed points in boolean (discrete) dynamical systems, i.e., finite
discrete dynamical systems over the domain {0,1}. For a class F of boolean
functions and a class G of graphs, an (F,G)-system is a boolean dynamical
system with local transitions functions lying in F and graphs in G. We show
that, if local transition functions are given by lookup tables, then the
following complexity classification holds: Let F be a class of boolean
functions closed under superposition and let G be a graph class closed under
taking minors. If F contains all min-functions, all max-functions, or all
self-dual and monotone functions, and G contains all planar graphs, then it is
#P-complete to compute the number of fixed points in an (F,G)-system; otherwise
it is computable in polynomial time. We also prove a dichotomy theorem for the
case that local transition functions are given by formulas (over logical
bases). This theorem has a significantly more complicated structure than the
theorem for lookup tables. A corresponding theorem for boolean circuits
coincides with the theorem for formulas.Comment: 16 pages, extended abstract presented at 10th Italian Conference on
Theoretical Computer Science (ICTCS'2007
Nondeterministic functions and the existence of optimal proof systems
We provide new characterizations of two previously studied questions on nondeterministic function classes: Q1: Do nondeterministic functions admit efficient deterministic refinements? Q2: Do nondeterministic function classes contain complete functions? We show that Q1 for the class is equivalent to the question whether the standard proof system for SAT is p-optimal, and to the assumption that every optimal proof system is p-optimal. Assuming only the existence of a p-optimal proof system for SAT, we show that every set with an optimal proof system has a p-optimal proof system. Under the latter assumption, we also obtain a positive answer to Q2 for the class . An alternative view on nondeterministic functions is provided by disjoint sets and tuples. We pursue this approach for disjoint -pairs and its generalizations to tuples of sets from and with disjointness conditions of varying strength. In this way, we obtain new characterizations of Q2 for the class . Question Q1 for is equivalent to the question of whether every disjoint -pair is easy to separate. In addition, we characterize this problem by the question of whether every propositional proof system has the effective interpolation property. Again, these interpolation properties are intimately connected to disjoint -pairs, and we show how different interpolation properties can be modeled by -pairs associated with the underlying proof system
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