On the power of structural decompositions of graph-based representations of constraint problems
From MaRDI portal
Publication:969532
DOI10.1016/j.artint.2009.12.004zbMath1207.68355OpenAlexW2064249627MaRDI QIDQ969532
Gianluigi Greco, Francesco Scarcello
Publication date: 7 May 2010
Published in: Artificial Intelligence (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.artint.2009.12.004
incidence graphstreewidthhypergraphsdecomposition methodsconstraint satisfactiondual graphsprimal graphs
Graph theory (including graph drawing) in computer science (68R10) Problem solving in the context of artificial intelligence (heuristics, search strategies, etc.) (68T20)
Related Items (4)
Characteristic function games with restricted agent interactions: core-stability and coalition structures ⋮ On the complexity of core, kernel, and bargaining set ⋮ Tree projections and constraint optimization problems: fixed-parameter tractability and parallel algorithms ⋮ Greedy strategies and larger islands of tractability for conjunctive queries and constraint satisfaction problems
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Hypertree decompositions and tractable queries
- Constraint satisfaction with bounded treewidth revisited
- A unified theory of structural tractability for constraint satisfaction problems
- Decomposing constraint satisfaction problems using database techniques
- Conjunctive query containment revisited
- A comparison of structural CSP decomposition methods
- Conjunctive-query containment and constraint satisfaction
- Binary vs. non-binary constraints
- Syntactic Characterization of Tree Database Schemas
- Generalized hypertree decompositions: NP-hardness and tractable variants
- Constraint solving via fractional edge covers
- Graph minors. II. Algorithmic aspects of tree-width
- A sufficient condition for backtrack-bounded search
- Power of Natural Semijoins
- Uniform Constraint Satisfaction Problems and Database Theory
- Computing LOGCFL certificates
This page was built for publication: On the power of structural decompositions of graph-based representations of constraint problems