Dear All
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Solving Combinatorial Search Problems Using DP, CP, IP, and SAT
http://www.cs.gsu.edu/?q=node/644
Start: 10/18/2012 1:30 pm
End: 10/18/2012 3:00 pm
Departmental Colloquium
Dr. Neng-Fa Zhou
Professor
Department of Computer and Information Science
CUNY Brooklyn College & Graduate Center
In this talk, I'll introduce several features of B-Prolog
for solving combinatorial search problems including tabling,
Constraint Programming (CP), Integer Programming (IP), and
SAT. The idea of tabling in logic programming is to memorize
answers to calls and use the answers to resolve subsequent
variant calls. This resembles the Dynamic Programming (DP)
idea of reusing answers of overlapping sub-problems and,
naturally, tabling is amenable to DP solutions. CP, IP, and
SAT are three different techniques for solving constraint
satisfaction and optimization problems: CP uses constraint
propagation to prune search spaces and heuristics to guide
search; IP relies on LP relaxation and branch-and-cut to
find optimal integer solutions; SAT solvers perform unit
propagation, conflict-driven clause learning, and
back-jumping to prune search spaces. B-Prolog efficiently
supports tabling and CP at its core; it also offers an SAT
compiler for constraints and an interface to LP/MIP solvers
such as CPLEX. These tools and the language constructs such
as loops and list comprehensions have made B-Prolog a
powerful system for describing and solving combinatorial
search problems.
About the Speaker: Neng-Fa Zhou is Professor of Computer
Science at the City University of New York (Brooklyn College
& Graduate Center). He has been an active researcher in
programming language systems for twenty years. He has
authored over thirty papers on programming languages,
constraint-solving, graphics, and machine learning systems
published in journals (ACM TOPLAS, Journal of Logic
Programming, Theory and Practice of Logic Programming,
Journal of Functional and Logic Programming, and Software
Practice and Experience) and major conferences. His papers
on compilation of logic programs, constraint solving, and
tabling have received a number of citations. He is the
principal designer and implementor of the B-Prolog system, a
fast CLP system that has a large number of users in both
academia and industry. He has reviewed articles for all
major journals and conferences in his area of research and
has served on the program committees of many important
conferences. He has participated in several solver
competitions, including CSP, ASP, Minizinc Challenge, and
Prolog Programming Contest, and has won several prizes.
Dr. Zhou received a B.S. degree in Computer Science from
Nanjing University, China, in 1984 and M.S. and Ph.D.
degrees in Computer Science and Engineering from Kyushu
University, Japan, in 1988 and 1991, respectively. Before
joining CUNY, he was with Kyushu Institute of Technology
from 1991–1999. He had visiting positions at Yale University
(1997), University of Alberta (1998), Tokyo Institute of
Technology (2002), and Monash University/University of
Melbourne (2005).
Department Conference Room
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best regards,
yanqing
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