3,022 research outputs found

    An Effective Routability-driven Placer for Mixed-size Circuit Designs

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    We propose a routability-driven analytical placer that aims at distributing pins evenly. This is accomplished by including a group of pin density constraints in its mathematical formulation. Moreover, for mixed-size circuits, we adopt a scaled smoothing method to cope with fixed macro blocks. As a result, we have fewer cells overlapping with fixed blocks after global placement, implying that the optimization of the global placement solution is more accurate and that the global placement solution resembles a legal solution more. Routing solutions obtained by a commercial router show that for most benchmark circuits, better routing results can be achieved on the placement results generated by our pin density oriented placer

    Simultaneously Learning Stochastic and Adversarial Bandits under the Position-Based Model

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    Online learning to rank (OLTR) interactively learns to choose lists of items from a large collection based on certain click models that describe users' click behaviors. Most recent works for this problem focus on the stochastic environment where the item attractiveness is assumed to be invariant during the learning process. In many real-world scenarios, however, the environment could be dynamic or even arbitrarily changing. This work studies the OLTR problem in both stochastic and adversarial environments under the position-based model (PBM). We propose a method based on the follow-the-regularized-leader (FTRL) framework with Tsallis entropy and develop a new self-bounding constraint especially designed for PBM. We prove the proposed algorithm simultaneously achieves O(logT)O(\log{T}) regret in the stochastic environment and O(mnT)O(m\sqrt{nT}) regret in the adversarial environment, where TT is the number of rounds, nn is the number of items and mm is the number of positions. We also provide a lower bound of order Ω(mnT)\Omega(m\sqrt{nT}) for adversarial PBM, which matches our upper bound and improves over the state-of-the-art lower bound. The experiments show that our algorithm could simultaneously learn in both stochastic and adversarial environments and is competitive compared to existing methods that are designed for a single environment

    A Descriptive Model of Robot Team and the Dynamic Evolution of Robot Team Cooperation

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    At present, the research on robot team cooperation is still in qualitative analysis phase and lacks the description model that can quantitatively describe the dynamical evolution of team cooperative relationships with constantly changeable task demand in Multi-robot field. First this paper whole and static describes organization model HWROM of robot team, then uses Markov course and Bayesian theorem for reference, dynamical describes the team cooperative relationships building. Finally from cooperative entity layer, ability layer and relative layer we research team formation and cooperative mechanism, and discuss how to optimize relative action sets during the evolution. The dynamic evolution model of robot team and cooperative relationships between robot teams proposed and described in this paper can not only generalize the robot team as a whole, but also depict the dynamic evolving process quantitatively. Users can also make the prediction of the cooperative relationship and the action of the robot team encountering new demands based on this model. Journal web page & a lot of robotic related papers www.ars-journal.co

    New Approaches to Protein Structure Prediction

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    Protein structure prediction is concerned with the prediction of a protein's three dimensional structure from its amino acid sequence. Such predictions are commonly performed by searching the possible structures and evaluating each structure by using some scoring function. If it is assumed that the target protein structure resembles the structure of a known protein, the search space can be significantly reduced. Such an approach is referred to as comparative structure prediction. When such an assumption is not made, the approach is known as ab initio structure prediction. There are several difficulties in devising efficient searches or in computing the scoring function. Many of these problems have ready solutions from known mathematical methods. However, the problems that are yet unsolved have hindered structure prediction methods from more ideal predictions. The objective of this study is to present a complete framework for ab initio protein structure prediction. To achieve this, a new search strategy is proposed, and better techniques are devised for computing the known scoring functions. Some of the remaining problems in protein structure prediction are revisited. Several of them are shown to be intractable. In many of these cases, approximation methods are suggested as alternative solutions. The primary issues addressed in this thesis are concerned with local structures prediction, structure assembly or sampling, side chain packing, model comparison, and structural alignment. For brevity, we do not elaborate on these problems here; a concise introduction is given in the first section of this thesis. Results from these studies prompted the development of several programs, forming a utility suite for ab initio protein structure prediction. Due to the general usefulness of these programs, some of them are released with open source licenses to benefit the community
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