• <u id="saeeq"><wbr id="saeeq"></wbr></u>
  • <s id="saeeq"><div id="saeeq"></div></s>
  • <u id="saeeq"></u>
  • <u id="saeeq"><noscript id="saeeq"></noscript></u>
  • <s id="saeeq"></s>
  • [3-2]The Automated-Reasoning Revolution: From Theory to Practice and Back

    文章來源:  |  發布時間:2016-02-29  |  【打印】 【關閉

      

      SKLCS Seminar

      Title:  The Automated-Reasoning Revolution: From Theory to Practice and Back

      Speaker: Moshe Vardi (Rice University, USA)   

      Time: 09:00, March 2nd, 2016

      Venue:  Seminar Room (334), Level 3, Building 5, Institute of Software, Chinese Academy of Sciences.

      

      Abstract: 

    For the past 40 years computer scientists generally believed that 
    NP-complete problems are intractable. In particular, Boolean
    satisfiability (SAT), as a paradigmatic automated-reasoning problem, has 
    been considered to be intractable. Over the past 20 years, however, there
    has been a quiet, but dramatic, revolution, and very large SAT instances 
    are now being solved routinely as part of software and hardware design.
    In this talk I will review this amazing development and show how automated 
    reasoning is now an industrial reality.
    
    I will then show describe how we can leverage SAT solving to accomplish 
    other automated-reasoning tasks.  Counting the the number of satisfying 
    truth assignments of a given Boolean formula or sampling such assignments 
    uniformly at random are fundamental computational problems in computer 
    science with applications in software testing, software synthesis, machine 
    learning, personalized learning, and more.  While the theory of these 
    problems has been thoroughly investigated since the 1980s, approximation 
    algorithms developed by theoreticians do not scale up to industrial-sized 
    instances.  Algorithms used by the industry offer better scalability, 
    but give up certain correctness guarantees to achieve scalability. We 
    describe a novel approach, based on universal hashing and Satisfiability 
    Modulo Theory, that scales to formulas with hundreds of thousands of 
    variable without giving up correctness guarantees.
    
    The talk is accesible to a general CS audience.
    Biography:
    Moshe Y. Vardi is the George Distinguished Service Professor in
    Computational Engineering and Director of the Ken Kennedy Institute for
    Information Technology Institute at Rice University. He is the
    co-recipient of three IBM Outstanding Innovation Awards, the ACM SIGACT
    Goedel Prize, the ACM Kanellakis Award, the ACM SIGMOD Codd Award, the
    Blaise Pascal Medal, the IEEE Computer Society Goode Award, the EATCS
    Distinguished Achievements Award, and the Southeastern Universities
    Research Association's Distinguished Scientist Award. He is the author
    and co-author of over 500 papers, as well as two books: Reasoning about
    Knowledge and Finite Model Theory and Its Applications. He is a Fellow
    of the Association for Computing Machinery, the American Association for
    Artificial Intelligence, the American Association for the Advancement of
    Science, the European Association for Theoretical Computer Science, and
    the Institute for Electrical and Electronic Engineers. He is a member of
    the US National Academy of Engineering, the American Academy of Arts and
    Science, the European Academy of Science, and Academia Europea. He holds
    honorary doctorates from the Saarland University in Germany and Orleans
    University in France. He is the Editor-in-Chief of the Communications of
    the ACM.
     
  • <u id="saeeq"><wbr id="saeeq"></wbr></u>
  • <s id="saeeq"><div id="saeeq"></div></s>
  • <u id="saeeq"></u>
  • <u id="saeeq"><noscript id="saeeq"></noscript></u>
  • <s id="saeeq"></s>
  • 久久久综合香蕉尹人综合网