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  • Charité  (9)
  • Heinrich-Mann-Bibl. Strausberg
  • Akademie d. Wiss.
  • GB Zeuthen
  • Richter, Michael M.  (9)
  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham :Springer International Publishing, | Cham :Springer.
    UID:
    edoccha_BV048496530
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (XLI, 607 p. 300 illus., 237 illus. in color).
    Edition: 1st ed. 2022
    ISBN: 978-3-319-45372-9
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-3-319-45371-2
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-3-319-45373-6
    Language: English
    Subjects: Engineering
    RVK:
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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  • 2
    UID:
    edoccha_9959186115002883
    Format: 1 online resource (XII, 440 p.)
    Edition: 1st ed. 1991.
    Edition: Online edition Springer Lecture Notes Archive ; 041142-5
    ISBN: 3-540-46667-3
    Series Statement: Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence ; 567
    Content: This volume presents the proceedings of an international workshop on the processing of declarative knowledge. The workshop was organized and hosted by the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI) in cooperation with the Association for Logic Programming (ALP) and the Gesellschaft f}r Informatik (GI). Knowledge is often represented using definite clauses, rules, constraints, functions, conceptual graphs, and related formalisms. The workshop addressed such high-level representations and their efficient implementation required for declarative knowledge bases. Many of the papers treat representation methods, mainly concept languages, and many treat implementation methods, such as transformation techniques and WAM-like abstract machines. Several papers describe implemented knowledge-processing systems. The competition between procedural and declarative paradigms was discussed in a panel session, and position statements of the panelists are included in the volume.
    Note: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , Efficient processing of declarative rule-based languages for Databases -- Has dedicated hardware for Prolog a future ? -- Commercial applications of large Prolog knowledge bases -- Compiling conceptual graphs -- Subsumption in knowledge graphs -- A terminological knowledge representation system with complete inference algorithms -- An introduction to dynamic concept systems -- Querying concept-based knowledge bases -- Subsumption computation in an object-oriented data model -- A concise presentation of ITL -- Distributed disjunctions for LIFE -- Reasoning with maximal time intervals -- Nonclassical models for logic programs -- Logical operational semantics of Parlog part I: And-Parallelism -- A tool for building connectionist-like networks based on term unification -- Providing declarative access to a processing system for satellite image data -- Declarative functionality descriptions of interactive reasoning modules -- Rule-aided constraint resolution in Laure -- Flang: A functional-logic language -- Processing functional definitions as declarative knowledge: A reduced bytecode implementation of a functional logic machine -- Reducing scheduling overheads for concurrent logic programs -- A general framework for knowledge compilation -- Data-driven transformation of meta-interpreters: A sketch -- Improving the efficiency of constraint logic programming languages by deriving specialized versions -- Parallelizing Prolog on shared-memory multiprocessors -- Processing abductive reasoning via Contextual Logic Programming -- Efficient implementation of narrowing and rewriting -- Tim: The toulouse inference machine for non-classical logic programming -- Declarative and procedural paradigms-do they really compete? -- The GCLA II programming language -- A brief description of the PROTOS-L system -- PCPL — PROLOG constraint processing library version 2.0 -- A mini-description of the ITL system -- Taxon: A concept language with concrete domains -- The ALF system: An efficient implementation of a functional logic language -- Transforming horn clauses for forward reasoning -- Implementation of the functional-logic language flang -- SEPIA 3.0 — An extensible prolog system -- FIDO: Exploring finite domain consistency techniques in logic programming. , English
    In: Springer eBooks
    Additional Edition: ISBN 3-540-55033-X
    Language: English
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  • 3
    UID:
    edoccha_9959186197902883
    Format: 1 online resource (IX, 439 p.)
    Edition: 1st ed. 1993.
    Edition: Online edition Springer Lecture Notes Archive ; 041142-5
    ISBN: 3-540-47890-6
    Series Statement: Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 702
    Content: This volume presents the proceedings of the Computer Science Logic Workshop CSL '92, held in Pisa, Italy, in September/October 1992. CSL '92 was the sixth of the series and the first one held as Annual Conference of the European Association for Computer Science Logic (EACSL). Full versions of the workshop contributions were collected after their presentation and reviewed. On the basis of 58 reviews, 26 papers were selected for publication, and appear here in revised final form. Topics covered in the volume include: Turing machines, linear logic, logic of proofs, optimization problems, lambda calculus, fixpoint logic, NP-completeness, resolution, transition system semantics, higher order partial functions, evolving algebras, functional logic programming, inductive definability, semantics of C, classes for a functional language, NP-optimization problems, theory of types and names, sconing and relators, 3-satisfiability, Kleene's slash, negation-complete logic programs, polynomial-time oracle machines, and monadic second-order properties.
    Note: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , A universal Turing machine -- Recursive inseparability in linear logic -- The basic logic of proofs -- Algorithmic structuring of cut-free proofs -- Optimization problems: Expressibility, approximation properties and expected asymptotic growth of optimal solutions -- Linear ?-calculus and categorical models revisited -- A self-interpreter of lambda calculus having a normal form -- An “Ehrenfeucht-Fraïssé game” for fixpoint logic and stratified fixpoint logic -- The class of problems that are linearly equivalent to satisfiability or a uniform method for proving NP-completeness -- Model building by resolution -- Comparative transition system semantics -- Reasoning with higher order partial functions -- Communicating evolving algebras -- On the completeness of narrowing as the operational semantics of functional logic programming -- Inductive definability with counting on finite structures -- Linear time algorithms and NP-complete problems -- The semantics of the C programming language -- A theory of classes for a functional language with effects -- Logical definability of NP-optimisation problems with monadic auxiliary predicates -- Universes in the theories of types and names -- Notes on sconing and relators -- Solving 3-satisfiability in less than 1, 579n steps -- Kleene's slash and existence of values of open terms in type theory -- Negation-complete logic programs -- Logical characterization of bounded query classes II: Polynomial-time oracle machines -- On asymptotic probabilities of monadic second order properties. , English
    In: Springer eBooks
    Additional Edition: ISBN 3-540-56992-8
    Language: English
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  • 4
    UID:
    edoccha_9959186365202883
    Format: 1 online resource (VIII, 402 p.)
    Edition: 1st ed. 1991.
    Edition: Online edition Springer Lecture Notes Archive ; 041142-5
    ISBN: 3-540-38401-4
    Series Statement: Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 533
    Content: The workshop Computer Science Logic '90 was held at the Max-Planck-Haus in Heidelberg, Germany, October 1-5, 1990. It was the fourth in a series of worskhops, following CSL '89 at the University of Kaiserslautern (see LNCS 440), CSL '88 at the University of Duisberg (see LNCS 385), and CSL '87 at the University of Karlsruhe (see LNCS 329). This volume contains 24 papers, chosen by means of a review procedure from the 35 papers presented at the workshop, some of which were invited and some selected from a total of 89 submissions. The papers cover a wide range of topics arising from the applications of logic to computer science.
    Note: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , Monadic second order logic, tree automata and forbidden minors -- On the reduction theory for average case complexity -- From prolog algebras towards WAM-A mathematical study of implementation -- A formal operational semantics for languages of type Prolog III -- Efficiency considerations on goal-directed forward chaining for logic programs -- Decision problems for tarski and presburger arithmetics extended with sets -- A fast garbage collection algorithm for WAM — based PROLOG -- A resolution variant deciding some classes of clause sets -- Subclasses of quantified boolean formulas -- Algorithmic proof with diminishing resources part 1 -- Cutting plane versus frege proof systems -- RAM with compact memory: a realistic and robust model of computation -- Randomness and turing reducibility restraints -- Towards an efficient tableau proof procedure for multiple-valued logics -- Interactive proof systems: Provers, rounds, and error bounds -- Logics for belief dependence -- A generalization of stability and its application to circumscription of positive introspective knowledge -- The complexity of adaptive error-correcting codes -- Ramsey's theorem in bounded arithmetic -- Nontrivial lower bounds for some NP-problems on directed graphs -- Expansions and models of autoepistemic theories -- On the existence of fixpoints in moore's autoepistemic logic and the non-monotonic logic of McDermott and Doyle -- On the tracking of loops in automated deductions -- The gap-language-technique revisited. , English
    In: Springer eBooks
    Additional Edition: ISBN 3-540-54487-9
    Language: English
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  • 5
    UID:
    edoccha_9959186114402883
    Format: 1 online resource (VIII, 431 p.)
    Edition: 1st ed. 1992.
    Edition: Online edition Springer Lecture Notes Archive ; 041142-5
    ISBN: 3-540-47285-1
    Series Statement: Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 626
    Content: This volume presents the proceedings of the workshop CSL '91 (Computer Science Logic) held at the University of Berne, Switzerland, October 7-11, 1991. This was the fifth in a series of annual workshops on computer sciencelogic (the first four are recorded in LNCS volumes 329, 385, 440, and 533). The volume contains 33 invited and selected papers on a variety of logical topics in computer science, including abstract datatypes, bounded theories, complexity results, cut elimination, denotational semantics, infinitary queries, Kleene algebra with recursion, minimal proofs, normal forms in infinite-valued logic, ordinal processes, persistent Petri nets, plausibility logic, program synthesis systems, quantifier hierarchies, semantics of modularization, stable logic, term rewriting systems, termination of logic programs, transitive closure logic, variants of resolution, and many others.
    Note: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , The expressive power of transitive closure and 2-way multihead automata -- Correctness proof for the WAM with types -- Model checking of persistent Petri nets -- Provability in TBLL: A decision procedure -- How to implement first order formulas in local memory machine models -- A new approach to abstract data types II computation on ADTs as ordinary computation -- A primitive recursive set theory and AFA: On the logical complexity of the largest bisimulation -- On bounded theories -- The cutting plane proof system with bounded degree of falsity -- Denotational versus declarative semantics for functional programming -- On transitive closure logic -- Some aspects of the probabilistic behavior of variants of resolution -- Safe queries in relational databases with functions -- Logical inference and polyhedral projection -- Stable logic -- A transformational methodology for proving termination of logic programs -- Plausibility logic -- Towards Kleene Algebra with recursion -- Equational specification of abstract types and combinators -- Normal forms in infinite-valued logic: The case of one variable -- A fragment of first order logic adequate for observation equivalence -- Ordinal processes in comparative concurrency semantics -- Logical semantics of modularisation -- A cut-elimination procedure designed for evaluating proofs as programs -- Minimal from classical proofs -- Quantifier hierarchies over word relations -- Complexity results for the default- and the autoepistemic logic -- On Completeness for NP via projection translations -- Control of ?-automata, Church's problem, and the emptiness problem for tree ?-automata -- Comparing the theory of representations and constructive mathematics -- Infinitary queries and their asymptotic probabilities I: Properties definable in transitive closure logic -- On completeness of program synthesis systems -- Proving termination for term rewriting systems. , English
    In: Springer eBooks
    Additional Edition: ISBN 3-540-55789-X
    Language: English
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  • 6
    UID:
    edoccha_9959186116602883
    Format: 1 online resource (VIII, 404 p.)
    Edition: 1st ed. 1989.
    Edition: Online edition Springer Lecture Notes Archive ; 041142-5
    ISBN: 3-540-46736-X
    Series Statement: Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 385
    Content: This volume contains the papers which were presented at the second workshop "Computer Science Logic" held in Duisburg, FRG, October 3-7, 1988. These proceedings cover a wide range of topics both from theoretical and applied areas of computer science. More specifically, the papers deal with problems arising at the border of logic and computer science: e.g. in complexity, data base theory, logic programming, artificial intelligence, and concurrency. The volume should be of interest to all logicians and computer scientists working in the above fields.
    Note: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , On disjunctive self-reducibility -- The knowledge representation language LLILOG -- Completeness with respect to interpretations in deterministic and nondeterministic polynomial time -- A temporal logic approach to specify and to prove properties of finite state concurrent systems -- A comparison of the resolution calculus and the connection method, and a new calculus generalizing both methods -- Characterizing complexity classes by general recursive definitions in higher types -- Size of models versus length of computations -- Boolean circuit complexity of algebraic interpolation problems -- Loop detection in propositional Prolog programs -- Numberings of R1?F -- Interval temporal logic and star-free expressions -- An interpreter with lazy evaluation for Prolog with functions -- On the complexity of the decision problem in propositional nonmonotonic logic -- Gentzen-Systems for propositional temporal logics -- Predicate inequalities as a basis for automated termination proofs for Prolog programs -- On the existence of fair schedulers -- Using finite-linear temporal logic for specifying database dynamics -- Is average superlinear speedup possible? -- Enforcement of integrity constraints in a semantic data model -- Delete operations and Horn formulas -- Integration of descriptive and procedural language constructs -- Normal forms and the complexity of computations of logic programs -- A remark on minimal polynomials of Boolean functions -- On the emptiness problem of tree automata and completeness of modal logics of programs. , English
    In: Springer eBooks
    Additional Edition: ISBN 3-540-51659-X
    Language: English
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  • 7
    UID:
    edoccha_9959186219902883
    Format: 1 online resource (VIII, 444 p.)
    Edition: 1st ed. 1990.
    Edition: Online edition Springer Lecture Notes Archive ; 041142-5
    ISBN: 3-540-47137-5
    Series Statement: Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 440
    Content: This volume contains the revised versions of 28 papers presented at the third workshop on Computer Science Logic held in Kaiserslautern, FRG, October 2-6, 1989. These proceedings cover a wide range of topics both from theoretical and applied areas of computer science. More specifically, the papers deal with problems arising at the border of logic and computer science, e.g. in complexity, data base theory, logic programming, artificial intelligece, and temporal logic. The volume should be of interest to all logicians and computer scientists working in the above field.
    Note: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , Honest polynomial-time degrees of elementary recursive sets -- On the verification of modules -- A logical operational semantics of full Prolog -- Set-theoretic reductions of Hilbert's tenth problem -- The complexity of subtheories of the existential linear theory of reals -- On test classes for universal theories -- Generalizing allowedness while retaining completeness of SLDNF-resolution -- Effectively given information systems and domains -- Davis-Putnam resolution versus unrestricted resolution -- On logical descriptions of some concepts in structural complexity theory -- Algebraic operational semantics and Occam -- Propositional provability and models of weak arithmetic -- Polymorphic recursion and semi-unification -- Deciding Horn classes by hyperresolution -- ?-branching programs of bounded width -- A predicate calculus with control of derivations -- Reducibility of monotone formulas to ?-formulas -- New ways for developing proof theories for first-order multi modal logics -- On the representation of data in lambda-calculus -- A streamlined temporal completeness theorem -- A concurrent branching time temporal logic -- Semantic for abstract fairness using metric spaces -- On the average time complexity of set partitioning -- A direct proof for the completeness of SLD-resolution -- A quantifier-free completion of logic programs -- Stratification of definite clause programs and of general logic programs -- The semantics of disjunctive deductive databases -- Sequential representation of primitive recursive functions, and complexity classes. , English
    In: Springer eBooks
    Additional Edition: ISBN 3-540-52753-2
    Language: English
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berlin, Heidelberg :Springer Berlin Heidelberg :
    UID:
    edoccha_9959186232002883
    Format: 1 online resource (XII, 272 p.)
    Edition: 1st ed. 1987.
    Edition: Online edition Springer Lecture Notes Archive ; 041142-5
    ISBN: 3-540-48026-9
    Series Statement: Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 277
    Note: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , General concepts from universal algebra -- Finite sets of reductions -- Infinite sets of reductions -- Automata and reductions -- Deciding algebraic properties of finitely presented monoids. , English
    In: Springer eBooks
    Additional Edition: ISBN 3-540-18598-4
    Language: English
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  • 9
    UID:
    edoccha_9959186386702883
    Format: 1 online resource (VIII, 348 p.)
    Edition: 1st ed. 1988.
    Edition: Online edition Springer Lecture Notes Archive ; 041142-5
    ISBN: 3-540-45960-X
    Series Statement: Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 329
    Content: This volume contains the papers which were presented to the workshop "Computer-Science Logic" held in Karlsruhe on October 12-16, 1987. Traditionally Logic, or more specifically, Mathematical Logic splits into several subareas: Set Theory, Proof Theory, Recursion Theory, and Model Theory. In addition there is what sometimes is called Philosophical Logic which deals with topics like nonclassical logics and which for historical reasons has been developed mainly at philosphical departments rather than at mathematics institutions. Today Computer Science challenges Logic in a new way. The theoretical analysis of problems in Computer Science for intrinsic reasons has pointed back to Logic. A broad class of questions became visible which is of a basically logical nature. These questions are often related to some of the traditional disciplines of Logic but normally without being covered adequately by any of them. The novel and unifying aspect of this new branch of Logic is the algorithmic point of view which is based on experiences people had with computers. The aim of the "Computer-Science Logic" workshop and of this volume is to represent the richness of research activities in this field in the German-speaking countries and to point to their underlying general logical principles.
    Note: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , Diagonalizing over deterministic polynomial time -- Resolution with feature unification -- Surjectivity for finite sets of combinators by weak reduction -- Proving finite satisfiability of deductive databases -- Is setl a suitable language for parallel programming — a theoretical approach -- Loose diagrams, semigroupoids, categories, groupoids and iteration -- Algebraic operational semantics and modula-2 -- Program verification using dynamic logic -- Induction in the elementary theory of types and names -- On the computational complexity of quantified Horn clauses -- The conjunctive complexity of quadratic boolean functions -- On type inference for object-oriented programming languages -- Optimization aspects of logical formulas -- Logic of approximation reasoning -- Deciding the path- and word-fair equivalence problem -- Learning by teams from examples with errors -- A survey of rewrite systems -- Interfacing a logic machine -- Complexity cores and hard-to-prove formulas -- On the average case complexity of backtracking for the exact-satisfiability problem -- On functions computable in nondeterministic polynomial time: Some characterizations -- Developing logic programs: Computing through normalizing -- Model theory of deductive databases -- Algorithms for propositional updates. , English
    In: Springer eBooks
    Additional Edition: ISBN 3-540-50241-6
    Language: English
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