Seminars

Links' Seminars and Public Events Add to google calendar
2024
Wed 20th Nov
11:00 am
12:00 pm
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Seminar by Bastien Degardins
Speaker: Bastien Degardins

Room: Amphi Atrium (RdC Bâtiment ESPRIT)

Title: TBA

Abstract: TBA
Fri 15th Nov
11:00 am
12:15 pm
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Seminar by Gabriel Bathie
Speaker: Gabriel Bathie (perso.ens-lyon.fr/gabriel.bathie/)

Room: B21

Title: The complexity of Testing Regular Languages - Gabriel Bathie, Corto Mascle and Nathanaël Fijalkow (LaBRI, Université de Bordeaux)

Abstract:

Property testing is concerned with the design of algorithms making sublinear number of queries to distinguish whether the input satisfies a given property or is far from having this property.
A seminal paper of Alon, Krivelevich, Newman, and Szegedy in 2001 introduced property testing of formal languages: the goal is to determine whether an input word belongs to a given language, or is far from any word in that language (in terms of Hamming distance).
They constructed the first property testing algorithm for the class of all regular languages. Somewhat surprisingly, their algorithm uses a number of queries that does not depend on the length of the input word.
This opened up a line of work with improved complexity results and applications to streaming algorithms.
In this work, we show a trichotomy result: the class of regular languages can be divided into three classes, each of which is associated with an optimal testing complexity.
Our analysis yields effective characterizations for all three classes using so-called minimal blocking sequences, reasoning directly and combinatorially on automata.
This talk will give an overview of the methods used since the work of Alon et al. and highlight the main tools used for our combinatorial characterization.
Based on joint work with Corto Mascle and Nathanaël Fijalkow.
"Lille-Salle B21"
Tue 12th Nov
2:00 pm
3:30 pm
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Seminar from Aliaume Lopez
Speaker: Aliaume Lopez (www.lsv.fr/~lopez/)

Title: Which polynomials are computed by N-weighted automata?

Room: B21

Abstract:
Given a semiring K, the notion of K-weighted automata generalizes regular languages to functions from Σ* to K. This model allows us to compute (multivariate) polynomial functions with coefficients in K. We provide a decidable characterization of polynomials with coefficients in Q that can be computed by K-weighted automata for K = (N,+,×) and for K = (Z+,×). As a consequence, we can decide which functions computed by Z-weighted automata are computed by N-weighted automata, under the assumption of commutativity (the order of the letters in the input does not matter) and polynomial growth (the output of the function is bounded by a polynomial in the size of the input). This surprisingly allows us to decide whether such functions are star-free, a notion borrowed from the theory of regular languages.
"Lille-Salle B21"
Fri 11th Oct
10:30 am
12:00 pm
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Seminar from Alexis de Colnet
Speaker: Alexis de Colnet (www.ac.tuwien.ac.at/people/decolnet/)

Title: An FPRAS for #NFA and #nFBDD

Abstract:

#NFA is the problem of counting the words of a given length accepted by
a non-deterministic finite automaton (NFA). The problem is #P-hard but
the approximate variant admits polynomial-time randomized algorithms
(FPRAS, or fully-polynomial time randomized approximation schemes).
Arenas, Croquevielle, Jayaram and Riveros were the first to show that
#NFA admits an FPRAS and that this result extends to several other
counting problems, in fact all problems in the class SpanL. In this talk
we present another FPRAS for #NFA which applies to problems not covered
by Arenas et al.'s result. In particular, the FPRAS described in this
talk can be used for the problem of counting the satisfying assignments
of non-deterministic read-once branching programs (nFBDD).
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Atrium bâtiment Esprit
Fri 7th Jun
10:00 am
11:00 am
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Séminaire Sam Van Gool dualité de Stone

Thu 30th May
to Fri 31st May
 all day
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Pysemigroup Hackaton

Fri 24th May
11:00 am
11:30 am
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Séminaire Sophie Tison
Speaker: Sophie Tison

Title: Containment of Regular Path Queries Under Constraints
Thu 16th May
2:00 pm
4:00 pm
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Seminar Arkaprava
Title: Efficient Optimization of Network Metrics in Large Uncertain
Graphs

Abstract: Graphs constitute an omnipresent data structure that can
model objects and their relationships in a wide variety of real-world
scenarios. The optimization of network metrics finds use in a plethora
of real-world applications. Most of the exact techniques for such tasks
turn out to be prohibitively time-consuming and memory-intensive for
the huge graphs that are usually encountered. Thus, there is a need for
efficient approximation algorithms. This talk focuses on the efficient
optimization of network metrics in large uncertain graphs, and
specifically the following three research problems. The first problem
aims to find, between a given pair of nodes in an uncertain graph, the
path having the highest probability of being a shortest path. The
second problem aims to find, in an uncertain graph, the subgraph having
the highest probability of being densest. The third problem is a novel
variant of the well-known opinion maximization problem where, given a
social network of users with real-valued opinions (about different
candidates), the goal is to choose the top-k seed users maximizing a
specific voting-based score at a given finite time horizon.
Best Regards,
Arkaprava
"Lieu : Lille, Salle : B11"
Fri 19th Apr
11:00 am
12:00 pm
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Seminar Pierre Lermusiaux
Speaker: Pierre Lermusiaux (plermusi.github.io/)

Title: Detection of Uncaught Exceptions in Functional Programs by Abstract
Interpretation

Abstract:

Exception handling is a key feature in modern programming languages. Exceptions
can be used to deal with errors, or as a means to control the flow of execution
of a program. Since they might unexpectedly terminate a program, unhandled
exceptions are a serious safety concern. We propose a static analysis to detect
uncaught exceptions in functional programs, that is defined as an abstract
interpreter. It computes a description of the values potentially returned by a
program using a novel abstract domain, that can express inductively defined
sets of values. Simultaneously, the analysis infers the possibly raised
exceptions, by computing in the abstract exception monad. This abstract
interpreter has been implemented as an effective static analyser for a large
subset of OCaml programs, that supports mutable data types, the OCaml module
system, and dynamically extensible data types such as the exception type. The
analyser has been evaluated on several hundreds of OCaml programs.
Fri 5th Apr
10:30 am
11:30 am
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Séminaire Guillaume Lagarde
Titre: Scaling Neural Program Synthesis with Distribution-based Search
Abstract:
In this talk, we will discuss the problem of automatically constructing
computer programs from input-output examples, especially when the
target language is domain-specific and defined using a context-free
grammar. I will introduce a theoretical framework called
distribution-based search, discuss its challenges, and present several
search strategies based on learning the weights of a probabilistic
context-free grammar (PCFG) and then using this PCFG to enumerate the
most promising candidate programs efficiently.
The presentation will be based on the following paper published at
AAAI'2022: arxiv.org/abs/2110.12485
Joint work with Nathanaël Fijalkow, Théo Matricon, Kevin Ellis, Pierre
Ohlmann, Akarsh Potta

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