2,914 research outputs found
Polynomial-time Solvable #CSP Problems via Algebraic Models and Pfaffian Circuits
A Pfaffian circuit is a tensor contraction network where the edges are
labeled with changes of bases in such a way that a very specific set of
combinatorial properties are satisfied. By modeling the permissible changes of
bases as systems of polynomial equations, and then solving via computation, we
are able to identify classes of 0/1 planar #CSP problems solvable in
polynomial-time via the Pfaffian circuit evaluation theorem (a variant of L.
Valiant's Holant Theorem). We present two different models of 0/1 variables,
one that is possible under a homogeneous change of basis, and one that is
possible under a heterogeneous change of basis only. We enumerate a series of
1,2,3, and 4-arity gates/cogates that represent constraints, and define a class
of constraints that is possible under the assumption of a ``bridge" between two
particular changes of bases. We discuss the issue of planarity of Pfaffian
circuits, and demonstrate possible directions in algebraic computation for
designing a Pfaffian tensor contraction network fragment that can simulate a
swap gate/cogate. We conclude by developing the notion of a decomposable
gate/cogate, and discuss the computational benefits of this definition
Designed-in security for cyber-physical systems
An expert from academia, one from a cyber-physical system (CPS) provider, and one from an end asset owner and user offer their different perspectives on the meaning and challenges of 'designed-in security.' The academic highlights foundational issues and talks about emerging technology that can help us design and implement secure software in CPSs. The vendor's view includes components of the academic view but emphasizes the secure system development process and the standards that the system must satisfy. The user issues a call to action and offers ideas that will ensure progress
Measuring changes in the behavior and attitudes of street-corner groups of boys towards an agency with a detached worker service.
Thesis (M.S.)--Boston Universit
On the Complexity of Hilbert Refutations for Partition
Given a set of integers W, the Partition problem determines whether W can be
divided into two disjoint subsets with equal sums. We model the Partition
problem as a system of polynomial equations, and then investigate the
complexity of a Hilbert's Nullstellensatz refutation, or certificate, that a
given set of integers is not partitionable. We provide an explicit construction
of a minimum-degree certificate, and then demonstrate that the Partition
problem is equivalent to the determinant of a carefully constructed matrix
called the partition matrix. In particular, we show that the determinant of the
partition matrix is a polynomial that factors into an iteration over all
possible partitions of W.Comment: Final versio
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