@misc{NeubauerHaubeltWankoetal.2018, author = {Neubauer, Kai and Haubelt, Christian and Wanko, Philipp and Schaub, Torsten H.}, title = {Utilizing quad-trees for efficient design space exploration with partial assignment evaluation}, series = {2018 23rd Asia and South Pacific Design Automation Conference (ASP-DAC)}, journal = {2018 23rd Asia and South Pacific Design Automation Conference (ASP-DAC)}, publisher = {IEEE}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-5090-0602-1}, issn = {2153-6961}, doi = {10.1109/ASPDAC.2018.8297362}, pages = {434 -- 439}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Recently, it has been shown that constraint-based symbolic solving techniques offer an efficient way for deciding binding and routing options in order to obtain a feasible system level implementation. In combination with various background theories, a feasibility analysis of the resulting system may already be performed on partial solutions. That is, infeasible subsets of mapping and routing options can be pruned early in the decision process, which fastens the solving accordingly. However, allowing a proper design space exploration including multi-objective optimization also requires an efficient structure for storing and managing non-dominated solutions. In this work, we propose and study the usage of the Quad-Tree data structure in the context of partial assignment evaluation during system synthesis. Out experiments show that unnecessary dominance checks can be avoided, which indicates a preference of Quad-Trees over a commonly used list-based implementation for large combinatorial optimization problems.}, language = {en} } @misc{NeubauerWankoSchaubetal.2018, author = {Neubauer, Kai and Wanko, Philipp and Schaub, Torsten H. and Haubelt, Christian}, title = {Exact multi-objective design space exploration using ASPmT}, series = {Proceedings of the 2018 Design, Automation \& Test in Europe Conference \& Exhibition (DATE)}, journal = {Proceedings of the 2018 Design, Automation \& Test in Europe Conference \& Exhibition (DATE)}, publisher = {IEEE}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-3-9819-2630-9}, issn = {1530-1591}, doi = {10.23919/DATE.2018.8342014}, pages = {257 -- 260}, year = {2018}, abstract = {An efficient Design Space Exploration (DSE) is imperative for the design of modern, highly complex embedded systems in order to steer the development towards optimal design points. The early evaluation of design decisions at system-level abstraction layer helps to find promising regions for subsequent development steps in lower abstraction levels by diminishing the complexity of the search problem. In recent works, symbolic techniques, especially Answer Set Programming (ASP) modulo Theories (ASPmT), have been shown to find feasible solutions of highly complex system-level synthesis problems with non-linear constraints very efficiently. In this paper, we present a novel approach to a holistic system-level DSE based on ASPmT. To this end, we include additional background theories that concurrently guarantee compliance with hard constraints and perform the simultaneous optimization of several design objectives. We implement and compare our approach with a state-of-the-art preference handling framework for ASP. Experimental results indicate that our proposed method produces better solutions with respect to both diversity and convergence to the true Pareto front.}, language = {en} } @misc{RazzaqKaminskiRomeroetal.2018, author = {Razzaq, Misbah and Kaminski, Roland and Romero, Javier and Schaub, Torsten H. and Bourdon, Jeremie and Guziolowski, Carito}, title = {Computing diverse boolean networks from phosphoproteomic time series data}, series = {Computational Methods in Systems Biology}, volume = {11095}, journal = {Computational Methods in Systems Biology}, publisher = {Springer}, address = {Berlin}, isbn = {978-3-319-99429-1}, issn = {0302-9743}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-99429-1_4}, pages = {59 -- 74}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Logical modeling has been widely used to understand and expand the knowledge about protein interactions among different pathways. Realizing this, the caspo-ts system has been proposed recently to learn logical models from time series data. It uses Answer Set Programming to enumerate Boolean Networks (BNs) given prior knowledge networks and phosphoproteomic time series data. In the resulting sequence of solutions, similar BNs are typically clustered together. This can be problematic for large scale problems where we cannot explore the whole solution space in reasonable time. Our approach extends the caspo-ts system to cope with the important use case of finding diverse solutions of a problem with a large number of solutions. We first present the algorithm for finding diverse solutions and then we demonstrate the results of the proposed approach on two different benchmark scenarios in systems biology: (1) an artificial dataset to model TCR signaling and (2) the HPN-DREAM challenge dataset to model breast cancer cell lines.}, language = {en} } @misc{BosserCabalarDieguezetal.2018, author = {Bosser, Anne-Gwenn and Cabalar, Pedro and Dieguez, Martin and Schaub, Torsten H.}, title = {Introducing temporal stable models for linear dynamic logic}, series = {16th International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, journal = {16th International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {ASSOC Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Palo Alto}, pages = {12 -- 21}, year = {2018}, abstract = {We propose a new temporal extension of the logic of Here-and-There (HT) and its equilibria obtained by combining it with dynamic logic over (linear) traces. Unlike previous temporal extensions of HT based on linear temporal logic, the dynamic logic features allow us to reason about the composition of actions. For instance, this can be used to exercise fine grained control when planning in robotics, as exemplified by GOLOG. In this paper, we lay the foundations of our approach, and refer to it as Linear Dynamic Equilibrium Logic, or simply DEL. We start by developing the formal framework of DEL and provide relevant characteristic results. Among them, we elaborate upon the relationships to traditional linear dynamic logic and previous temporal extensions of HT.}, language = {en} } @misc{AlvianoRomeroDavilaSchaub2018, author = {Alviano, Mario and Romero Davila, Javier and Schaub, Torsten H.}, title = {Preference Relations by Approximation}, series = {Sixteenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, journal = {Sixteenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Palo Alto}, pages = {2 -- 11}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Declarative languages for knowledge representation and reasoning provide constructs to define preference relations over the set of possible interpretations, so that preferred models represent optimal solutions of the encoded problem. We introduce the notion of approximation for replacing preference relations with stronger preference relations, that is, relations comparing more pairs of interpretations. Our aim is to accelerate the computation of a non-empty subset of the optimal solutions by means of highly specialized algorithms. We implement our approach in Answer Set Programming (ASP), where problems involving quantitative and qualitative preference relations can be addressed by ASPRIN, implementing a generic optimization algorithm. Unlike this, chains of approximations allow us to reduce several preference relations to the preference relations associated with ASP's native weak constraints and heuristic directives. In this way, ASPRIN can now take advantage of several highly optimized algorithms implemented by ASP solvers for computing optimal solutions}, language = {en} } @misc{SchaepersNiemuellerLakemeyeretal.2018, author = {Sch{\"a}pers, Bj{\"o}rn and Niemueller, Tim and Lakemeyer, Gerhard and Gebser, Martin and Schaub, Torsten H.}, title = {ASP-Based Time-Bounded Planning for Logistics Robots}, series = {Twenty-Eighth International Conference on Automated Planning and Scheduling (ICAPS 2018)}, journal = {Twenty-Eighth International Conference on Automated Planning and Scheduling (ICAPS 2018)}, publisher = {ASSOC Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Palo Alto}, issn = {2334-0835}, pages = {509 -- 517}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Manufacturing industries are undergoing a major paradigm shift towards more autonomy. Automated planning and scheduling then becomes a necessity. The Planning and Execution Competition for Logistics Robots in Simulation held at ICAPS is based on this scenario and provides an interesting testbed. However, the posed problem is challenging as also demonstrated by the somewhat weak results in 2017. The domain requires temporal reasoning and dealing with uncertainty. We propose a novel planning system based on Answer Set Programming and the Clingo solver to tackle these problems and incentivize robot cooperation. Our results show a significant performance improvement, both, in terms of lowering computational requirements and better game metrics.}, language = {en} } @misc{BrewkaSchaubWoltran2018, author = {Brewka, Gerhard and Schaub, Torsten H. and Woltran, Stefan}, title = {Interview with Gerhard Brewka}, series = {K{\"u}nstliche Intelligenz}, volume = {32}, journal = {K{\"u}nstliche Intelligenz}, number = {2-3}, publisher = {Springer}, address = {Heidelberg}, issn = {0933-1875}, doi = {10.1007/s13218-018-0549-5}, pages = {219 -- 221}, year = {2018}, abstract = {This interview with Gerhard Brewka was conducted by correspondance in May 2018. The question set was compiled by Torsten Schaub and Stefan Woltran.}, language = {en} } @misc{LifschitzSchaubWoltran2018, author = {Lifschitz, Vladimir and Schaub, Torsten H. and Woltran, Stefan}, title = {Interview with Vladimir Lifschitz}, series = {K{\"u}nstliche Intelligenz}, volume = {32}, journal = {K{\"u}nstliche Intelligenz}, number = {2-3}, publisher = {Springer}, address = {Heidelberg}, issn = {0933-1875}, doi = {10.1007/s13218-018-0552-x}, pages = {213 -- 218}, year = {2018}, abstract = {This interview with Vladimir Lifschitz was conducted by Torsten Schaub at the University of Texas at Austin in August 2017. The question set was compiled by Torsten Schaub and Stefan Woltran.}, language = {en} } @misc{SchaubWoltran2018, author = {Schaub, Torsten H. and Woltran, Stefan}, title = {Special issue on answer set programming}, series = {K{\"u}nstliche Intelligenz}, volume = {32}, journal = {K{\"u}nstliche Intelligenz}, number = {2-3}, publisher = {Springer}, address = {Heidelberg}, issn = {0933-1875}, doi = {10.1007/s13218-018-0554-8}, pages = {101 -- 103}, year = {2018}, language = {en} }