143,142 research outputs found
Weakest Preconditions for Progress
Predicate transformers that map the postcondition and all intermediate conditions of a command to a precondition are introduced. They can be used to specify certain progress properties of sequential programs
Generalised quantum weakest preconditions
Generalisation of the quantum weakest precondition result of D'Hondt and
Panangaden is presented. In particular the most general notion of quantum
predicate as positive operator valued measure (POVM) is introduced. The
previously known quantum weakest precondition result has been extended to cover
the case of POVM playing the role of a quantum predicate. Additionally, our
result is valid in infinite dimension case and also holds for a quantum
programs defined as a positive but not necessary completely positive
transformations of a quantum states.Comment: 7 pages, no figures, added references, changed conten
Simple characterizations for commutativity of quantum weakest preconditions
In a recent letter [Information Processing Letters~104 (2007) 152-158], it
has shown some sufficient conditions for commutativity of quantum weakest
preconditions. This paper provides some alternative and simple
characterizations for the commutativity of quantum weakest preconditions, i.e.,
Theorem 3.1, Theorem 3.2 and Proposition 3.3 in what follows. We also show that
to characterize the commutativity of quantum weakest preconditions in terms of
() is hard in the sense of Proposition 4.1 and Proposition 4.2.Comment: Re-written, comments are welcom
Relating Knowledge and Coordinated Action: The Knowledge of Preconditions Principle
The Knowledge of Preconditions principle (KoP) is proposed as a widely
applicable connection between knowledge and action in multi-agent systems.
Roughly speaking, it asserts that if some condition is a necessary condition
for performing a given action A, then knowing that this condition holds is also
a necessary condition for performing A. Since the specifications of tasks often
involve necessary conditions for actions, the KoP principle shows that such
specifications induce knowledge preconditions for the actions. Distributed
protocols or multi-agent plans that satisfy the specifications must ensure that
this knowledge be attained, and that it is detected by the agents as a
condition for action. The knowledge of preconditions principle is formalised in
the runs and systems framework, and is proven to hold in a wide class of
settings. Well-known connections between knowledge and coordinated action are
extended and shown to derive directly from the KoP principle: a "common
knowledge of preconditions" principle is established showing that common
knowledge is a necessary condition for performing simultaneous actions, and a
"nested knowledge of preconditions" principle is proven, showing that
coordinating actions to be performed in linear temporal order requires a
corresponding form of nested knowledge.Comment: In Proceedings TARK 2015, arXiv:1606.0729
Preconditions for a successful implementation of supervisors' prompt corrective action: Is there a case for a banking standard in the European Union?
Over the past years, several countries around the world have adopted a system of prudential prompt corrective action (PCA). The European Union countries are being encouraged to adopt PCA by policy analysts who explicitly call for its adoption. To date, most of the discussion on PCA has focused on its overall merits. This paper focuses on the preconditions needed for the adoption of an effective PCA. These preconditions include conceptual elements such as a prudential supervisory focus on minimizing deposit insurance losses and mandating supervisory action as capital declines. These preconditions also include institutional aspects such as greater supervisory independence and authority, more effective resolution mechanisms, and better methods of measuring capital.
The inheritance of dynamic and deontic integrity constraints or: Does the boss have more rights?
In [18,23], we presented a language for the specification of static, dynamic and deontic integrity constraints (IC's) for conceptual models (CM's). An important problem not discussed in that paper is how IC's are inherited in a taxonomic network of types. For example, if students are permitted to perform certain actions under certain preconditions, must we repeat these preconditions when specializing this action for the subtype of graduate students, or are they inherited, and if so, how? For static constraints, this problem is relatively trivial, but for dynamic and deontic constraints, it will turn out that it contains numerous pitfalls, caused by the fact that common sense supplies presuppositions about the structure of IC inheritance that are not warranted by logic. In this paper, we unravel some of these presuppositions and show how to avoid the pitfalls. We first formulate a number of general theorems about the inheritance of necessary and/or sufficient conditions and show that for upward inheritance, a closure assumption is needed. We apply this to dynamic and deontic IC's, where conditions arepreconditions of actions, and show that our common sense is sometimes mistaken about the logical implications of what we have specified. We also show the connection of necessary and sufficient preconditions of actions with the specification of weakest preconditions in programming logic. Finally, we argue that information analysts usually assume constraint completion in the specification of (pre)conditions analogous to predicate completion in Prolog and circumscription in non-monotonic logic. The results are illustrated with numerous examples and compared with other approaches in the literature
The Use of Knowledge Preconditions in Language Processing
If an agent does not possess the knowledge needed to perform an action, it
may privately plan to obtain the required information on its own, or it may
involve another agent in the planning process by engaging it in a dialogue. In
this paper, we show how the requirements of knowledge preconditions can be used
to account for information-seeking subdialogues in discourse. We first present
an axiomatization of knowledge preconditions for the SharedPlan model of
collaborative activity (Grosz & Kraus, 1993), and then provide an analysis of
information-seeking subdialogues within a general framework for discourse
processing. In this framework, SharedPlans and relationships among them are
used to model the intentional component of Grosz and Sidner's (1986) theory of
discourse structure.Comment: 7 pages, LaTeX, uses ijcai95.sty, postscript figure
Contingent Information Systems Development
Situated approaches based on project contingencies are becoming more and more an important research topic for information systems development organizations. The Information Services Organization, which was investigated, has recognized that it should tune its systems development approaches to the specific situation. A model has been developed, dealing with the matching between prevailing contingency factors and the preconditions of already existing situated approaches. Furthermore, a generic process model for systems development, including the information systems operations stage, is proposed. This model makes it possible to derive from it specific systems development strategies. A number of basic development strategies, specific for the Information Services Organization, are described. Preconditions, specific for this organization, are added to the standard situated approaches
The Colorado Trust's Advocacy Funding Strategy: Lessons Learned for Funders of Advocacy Efforts & Evaluations
Describes the trust's framework for change through advocacy funding, including theory of change, strategic learning loop through grantee-evaluator interaction, preconditions for funding, and benchmarks for measuring success. Lists grantees' achievements
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