58 research outputs found

    Join sizes, urn models and normal limiting distributions

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    AbstractWe study some parameters of relational databases (sizes of relations obtained by a join) that can be described by generating functions on three variables, of the kind Ï•(x, y, z)d. We modelize these parameters by suitable urn models and give conditions under which they asymptotically follow a gaussian distribution

    B-urns

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    The fringe of a B-tree with parameter mm is considered as a particular P\'olya urn with mm colors. More precisely, the asymptotic behaviour of this fringe, when the number of stored keys tends to infinity, is studied through the composition vector of the fringe nodes. We establish its typical behaviour together with the fluctuations around it. The well known phase transition in P\'olya urns has the following effect on B-trees: for m≤59m\leq 59, the fluctuations are asymptotically Gaussian, though for m≥60m\geq 60, the composition vector is oscillating; after scaling, the fluctuations of such an urn strongly converge to a random variable WW. This limit is C\mathbb C-valued and it does not seem to follow any classical law. Several properties of WW are shown: existence of exponential moments, characterization of its distribution as the solution of a smoothing equation, existence of a density relatively to the Lebesgue measure on C\mathbb C, support of WW. Moreover, a few representations of the composition vector for various values of mm illustrate the different kinds of convergence

    A Computational Model for Logical Analysis of Data

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    Initially introduced by Peter Hammer, Logical Analysis of Data is a methodology that aims at computing a logical justification for dividing a group of data in two groups of observations, usually called the positive and negative groups. Consider this partition into positive and negative groups as the description of a partially defined Boolean function; the data is then processed to identify a subset of attributes, whose values may be used to characterize the observations of the positive groups against those of the negative group. LAD constitutes an interesting rule-based learning alternative to classic statistical learning techniques and has many practical applications. Nevertheless, the computation of group characterization may be costly, depending on the properties of the data instances. A major aim of our work is to provide effective tools for speeding up the computations, by computing some \emph{a priori} probability that a given set of attributes does characterize the positive and negative groups. To this effect, we propose several models for representing the data set of observations, according to the information we have on it. These models, and the probabilities they allow us to compute, are also helpful for quickly assessing some properties of the real data at hand; furthermore they may help us to better analyze and understand the computational difficulties encountered by solving methods. Once our models have been established, the mathematical tools for computing probabilities come from Analytic Combinatorics. They allow us to express the desired probabilities as ratios of generating functions coefficients, which then provide a quick computation of their numerical values. A further, long-range goal of this paper is to show that the methods of Analytic Combinatorics can help in analyzing the performance of various algorithms in LAD and related fields

    Average cost of orthogonal range queries in multiattribute trees

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    Birthday paradox,coupon collectors,caching algorithms and self-organizing search

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    The permutation-path coloring problem on trees

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    AbstractIn this paper we first show that the permutation-path coloring problem is NP-hard even for very restrictive instances like involutions, which are permutations that contain only cycles of length at most two, on both binary trees and on trees having only two vertices with degree greater than two, and for circular permutations, which are permutations that contain exactly one cycle, on trees with maximum degree greater than or equal to 4. We calculate a lower bound on the average complexity of the permutation-path coloring problem on arbitrary networks. Then we give combinatorial and asymptotic results for the permutation-path coloring problem on linear networks in order to show that the average number of colors needed to color any permutation on a linear network on n vertices is n/4+o(n). We extend these results and obtain an upper bound on the average complexity of the permutation-path coloring problem on arbitrary trees, obtaining exact results in the case of generalized star trees. Finally we explain how to extend these results for the involutions-path coloring problem on arbitrary trees
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