6,564 research outputs found
Edsger Wybe Dijkstra (1930 -- 2002): A Portrait of a Genius
We discuss the scientific contributions of Edsger Wybe Dijkstra, his opinions
and his legacy.Comment: 10 pages. To appear in Formal Aspects of Computin
Epistemic Analysis of Strategic Games with Arbitrary Strategy Sets
We provide here an epistemic analysis of arbitrary strategic games based on
the possibility correspondences. Such an analysis calls for the use of
transfinite iterations of the corresponding operators. Our approach is based on
Tarski's Fixpoint Theorem and applies both to the notions of rationalizability
and the iterated elimination of strictly dominated strategies.Comment: 8 pages Proc. of the 11th Conference on Theoretical Aspects of
Rationality and Knowledge (TARK XI), 2007. To appea
Direct Proofs of Order Independence
We establish a generic result concerning order independence of a dominance
relation on finite games. It allows us to draw conclusions about order
independence of various dominance relations in a direct and simple way.Comment: 9 page
The Role of Commutativity in Constraint Propagation Algorithms
Constraint propagation algorithms form an important part of most of the
constraint programming systems. We provide here a simple, yet very general
framework that allows us to explain several constraint propagation algorithms
in a systematic way. In this framework we proceed in two steps. First, we
introduce a generic iteration algorithm on partial orderings and prove its
correctness in an abstract setting. Then we instantiate this algorithm with
specific partial orderings and functions to obtain specific constraint
propagation algorithms.
In particular, using the notions commutativity and semi-commutativity, we
show that the {\tt AC-3}, {\tt PC-2}, {\tt DAC} and {\tt DPC} algorithms for
achieving (directional) arc consistency and (directional) path consistency are
instances of a single generic algorithm. The work reported here extends and
simplifies that of Apt \citeyear{Apt99b}.Comment: 35 pages. To appear in ACM TOPLA
Determination of the electric field gradient and the magnetic field in M\"ossbauer spectrocsopy by half-cube method
This paper presents a new method to determine all components of the electric
field gradient tensor and orientation of the hyperfine magnetic field axis in
the absorber Cartesian frame for M\"ossbauer spectroscopy for nuclear
transitions between levels with spin 3/2 and 1/2. The method can be applied for
single-crystal absorbers with well separated absorption lines in their spectra.
Explicit formulas derived from velocity moments are presented. The new method
allows full separation of the electric quadrupolar and magnetic dipolar
hyperfine interactions by using unpolarized radiation.Comment: 6 page
One More Revolution to Make: Free Scientific Publishing
Computer scientists are in the position to create new, free high-quality
journals. So what would it take?Comment: Taken from
http://www.acm.org/pubs/citations/journals/cacm/2001-44-5/p25-apt/ Posted
with permission of the AC
A Proof Theoretic View of Constraint Programming
We provide here a proof theoretic account of constraint programming that
attempts to capture the essential ingredients of this programming style. We
exemplify it by presenting proof rules for linear constraints over interval
domains, and illustrate their use by analyzing the constraint propagation
process for the {\tt SEND + MORE = MONEY} puzzle. We also show how this
approach allows one to build new constraint solvers.Comment: 25 page
Relative Strength of Strategy Elimination Procedures
We compare here the relative strength of four widely used procedures on
finite strategic games: iterated elimination of weakly/strictly dominated
strategies by a pure/mixed strategy. A complication is that none of these
procedures is based on a monotonic operator. To deal with this problem we use
'global' versions of these operators.Comment: 8 page
Order Independence and Rationalizability
Two natural strategy elimination procedures have been studied for strategic
games. The first one involves the notion of (strict, weak, etc) dominance and
the second the notion of rationalizability. In the case of dominance the
criterion of order independence allowed us to clarify which notions and under
what circumstances are robust. In the case of rationalizability this criterion
has not been considered. In this paper we investigate the problem of order
independence for rationalizability by focusing on three naturally entailed
reduction relations on games. These reduction relations are distinguished by
the adopted reference point for the notion of a better response. Additionally,
they are parametrized by the adopted system of beliefs. We show that for one
reduction relation the outcome of its (possibly transfinite) iterations does
not depend on the order of elimination of the strategies. This result does not
hold for the other two reduction relations. However, under a natural assumption
the iterations of all three reduction relations yield the same outcome. The
obtained order independence results apply to the frameworks considered in
Bernheim 84 and Pearce 84. For finite games the iterations of all three
reduction relations coincide and the order independence holds for three natural
systems of beliefs considered in the literature.Comment: Appeared in: Proc. of the 10th conference on Theoretical Aspects of
Rationality and Knowledge (TARK X), pp. 22-38 (2005
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