The Good, the Bad, and the Odd: Cycles in Answer-Set Programs

02/15/2012
by   Johannes Klaus Fichte, et al.
0

Backdoors of answer-set programs are sets of atoms that represent clever reasoning shortcuts through the search space. Assignments to backdoor atoms reduce the given program to several programs that belong to a tractable target class. Previous research has considered target classes based on notions of acyclicity where various types of cycles (good and bad cycles) are excluded from graph representations of programs. We generalize the target classes by taking the parity of the number of negative edges on bad cycles into account and consider backdoors for such classes. We establish new hardness results and non-uniform polynomial-time tractability relative to directed or undirected cycles.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
11/27/2019

Extended Formulations for Stable Set Polytopes of Graphs Without Two Disjoint Odd Cycles

Let G be an n-node graph without two disjoint odd cycles. The algorithm ...
research
08/30/2023

Data reduction for directed feedback vertex set on graphs without long induced cycles

We study reduction rules for Directed Feedback Vertex Set (DFVS) on inst...
research
04/07/2020

Cutting cycles of rods in space is FPT

In this short note, we show that cutting cycles of rods is fixed-paramet...
research
03/07/2019

Colouring Non-Even Digraphs

A colouring of a digraph as defined by Erdos and Neumann-Lara in 1980 is...
research
03/27/2013

Directed Cycles in Belief Networks

The most difficult task in probabilistic reasoning may be handling direc...
research
03/07/2020

Classification of minimally unsatisfiable 2-CNFs

We consider minimally unsatisfiable 2-CNFs, i.e., minimally unsatisfiabl...
research
10/03/2019

Pay Attention: Leveraging Sequence Models to Predict the Useful Life of Batteries

We use data on 124 batteries released by Stanford University to first tr...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset