
Automated Deduction Techniques for the Management of
... in a comfortable way. In particular, including a default negation principle and disjunctions in our logic turned out to facilitate the formalization (cf. Section 1.2 above). As a restriction, we insist on stratified specifications, which turns out not to be a problem. Stratified specifications are a ...
... in a comfortable way. In particular, including a default negation principle and disjunctions in our logic turned out to facilitate the formalization (cf. Section 1.2 above). As a restriction, we insist on stratified specifications, which turns out not to be a problem. Stratified specifications are a ...
Using Model Trees for Computer Architecture Performance Analysis
... Abstract— The identification of performance issues on specific computer architectures has a variety of important benefits such as tuning software to improve performance, comparing the performance of various platforms and assisting in the design of new platforms. In order to enable this analysis, mos ...
... Abstract— The identification of performance issues on specific computer architectures has a variety of important benefits such as tuning software to improve performance, comparing the performance of various platforms and assisting in the design of new platforms. In order to enable this analysis, mos ...
Werbos_IECON05_tutorial
... One System does it all -- not just a collection of chapters or methods Domain-specific info is 2-edged sword: – need to use it; need to be able to do without it ...
... One System does it all -- not just a collection of chapters or methods Domain-specific info is 2-edged sword: – need to use it; need to be able to do without it ...
Artificial Intelligence in the Open World
... and logicists started thinking about placing theorem provers into the real world— into the open world. Perhaps making the closed-world assumption would be safe. What is not known to be true is false. The inadequacies of such an approach was readily seen, and thinking blossomed about extensions to lo ...
... and logicists started thinking about placing theorem provers into the real world— into the open world. Perhaps making the closed-world assumption would be safe. What is not known to be true is false. The inadequacies of such an approach was readily seen, and thinking blossomed about extensions to lo ...
Model Checking of Hybrid Systems via Satisfiability Modulo Theories
... 10], formal safety assessment [17, 14], formal verification of hybrid automata [4, 3, 24, 36, 34, 35, 48], temporal reasoning under uncertainty [33, 32]. Cimatti has published 26 journal papers and 98 conference papers, and has an H-index of 37 (details are available at http://scholar.google.it/ cit ...
... 10], formal safety assessment [17, 14], formal verification of hybrid automata [4, 3, 24, 36, 34, 35, 48], temporal reasoning under uncertainty [33, 32]. Cimatti has published 26 journal papers and 98 conference papers, and has an H-index of 37 (details are available at http://scholar.google.it/ cit ...
Appendix
... synaptic spikes (see Methods), the response of the model neuron to a train of synaptic events at times (ts0 , ts1 , . . . , tsn−1 ) can be calculated by iterating the following map: vi = (vi−1 + A)e−µISIi for i = 1, . . . , n − 1, where ISIi = tsi − tsi−1 , A is the synaptic strength (assumed for si ...
... synaptic spikes (see Methods), the response of the model neuron to a train of synaptic events at times (ts0 , ts1 , . . . , tsn−1 ) can be calculated by iterating the following map: vi = (vi−1 + A)e−µISIi for i = 1, . . . , n − 1, where ISIi = tsi − tsi−1 , A is the synaptic strength (assumed for si ...
The Root of the Problem: A Brief History of Equation Solving
... could be solved by radicals: Galois theory of groups. “. . . had the brilliant idea of just making up fictitious numbers to supply answers to problems which didn’t otherwise have a solution.” Bluffers’ Guide ...
... could be solved by radicals: Galois theory of groups. “. . . had the brilliant idea of just making up fictitious numbers to supply answers to problems which didn’t otherwise have a solution.” Bluffers’ Guide ...
A Hierarchical Approach to Multimodal Classification
... capability; and being supported means the model does not generalise beyond the information given in the data. When data come from Euclidean space, the model is a set of hyperrectangles consistently, tightly and maximally approximating the data. Observe that, this approach is different from decision ...
... capability; and being supported means the model does not generalise beyond the information given in the data. When data come from Euclidean space, the model is a set of hyperrectangles consistently, tightly and maximally approximating the data. Observe that, this approach is different from decision ...
Modeling with Polynomial Functions
... Because the third-order differences are constant, you know that the numbers can be represented by a cubic function which has the form ƒ(n) = an3 + bn2 + cn + d. By substituting the first four triangular pyramidal numbers into the function, you can obtain a system of four linear equations in four var ...
... Because the third-order differences are constant, you know that the numbers can be represented by a cubic function which has the form ƒ(n) = an3 + bn2 + cn + d. By substituting the first four triangular pyramidal numbers into the function, you can obtain a system of four linear equations in four var ...