Links' Seminars and Public Events |
2022 | |
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Fri 18th Nov 11:00 am 11:30 am | Seminar by Sarah Winter CANCELLED for COVID: we will attempt to reschedule this seminar to early 2023 Speaker: Sarah Winter — sarahwinter.net/ Title: A Regular and Complete Notion of Delay for Streaming String Transducers Abstract: The notion of delay between finite transducers is a core element of numerous fundamental results of transducer theory. The goal of this work is to provide a similar notion for more complex abstract machines: we introduce a new notion of delay tailored to measure the similarity between streaming string transducers (SST). We show that our notion is regular: we design a finite automaton that can check whether the delay between any two SSTs executions is smaller than some given bound. As a consequence, our notion enjoys good decidability properties: in particular, while equivalence between non-deterministic SSTs is undecidable, we show that equivalence up to fixed delay is decidable. Moreover, we show that our notion has good completeness properties: we prove that two SSTs are equivalent if and only if they are equivalent up to some (computable) bounded delay. Together with the regularity of our delay notion, it provides an alternative proof that SSTs equivalence is decidable. Finally, the definition of our delay notion is machine-independent, as it only depends on the origin semantics of SSTs. As a corollary, the completeness result also holds for equivalent machine models such as deterministic two-way transducers, or MSO transducers. This is joint work with Emmanuel Filiot, Ismaël Jecker, and Christof Löding. |
Fri 21st Oct 11:00 am 12:00 pm | Online seminar by Pierre Pradic Speaker: Pierre Pradic — perso.ens-lyon.fr/pierre.pradic/ Title: Synthesizing Nested Relational Queries from Implicit Specifications Abstract: Derived datasets can be defined implicitly or explicitly. An implicit definition (of dataset O in terms of datasets I⃗ ) is a logical specification involving the source data I⃗ and the interface data O. It is a valid definition of O in terms of I⃗ , if any two models of the specification agreeing on I⃗ agree on O. In contrast, an explicit definition is a query that produces O from I⃗ . Variants of Beth's theorem state that one can convert implicit definitions to explicit ones. Further, this conversion can be done effectively given a proof witnessing implicit definability in a suitable proof system. In this talk, I will discuss an analogous effective implicit-to-explicit result for nested relations: implicit definitions, given in the natural logic for nested relations, can be effectively converted to explicit definitions in the nested relational calculus NRC. I will first spend some time explaining what NRC is and what logic we use to describe implicit definitions of nested queries. Then I will present the results obtained in our papers, attempt to give some intuitions on the proof of the main theorem and say a few words on in particular the proof-theoretic techniques and concerns that come up (namely, cut-elimination and focussing) and how this can impact the complexity of extracting explicit definitions from proofs of implicit definability. Then if time allows I will discuss a more general model-theoretic result that we first used to give a non-constructive proof of our theorem, and some ideas that we have towards making it constructive and bounding the complexity of extracting explicit definitions. This is Joint work with Michael Benedikt and Christoph Wenhard. The main results I will be discussing were written up in arxiv.org/abs/2005.06503 and arxiv.org/abs/2209.08299. Online |
Fri 30th Sep 10:00 am 11:30 am | Seminar by Liat Peterfreund Speaker: Liat Peterfreund — sites.google.com/view/liatpeterfreund/ Title: Querying Incomplete Numerical Data: Between Certain and Possible Answers Abstract: Queries with aggregation and arithmetic operations, as well as incomplete data, are common in real-world databases, but we lack a good understanding of how they should interact. On the one hand, systems based on SQL provide ad-hoc rules for numerical nulls, on the other, theoretical research largely concentrates on the standard notions of certain and possible answers which in the presence of numerical attributes and aggregates are often meaningless. In this work, we define a principled compositional framework for databases with numerical nulls and answering queries with arithmetic and aggregations over them. We assume that missing values are given by probability distributions associated with marked nulls, which yields a model of probabilistic bag databases. We concentrate on queries that resemble standard SQL with arithmetic and aggregation and show that they are measurable, and that their outputs have a finite representation. Moreover, since the classical forms of answers provide little information in the numerical setting, we look at the probability that numerical values in output tuples belong to specific intervals. Even though their exact computation is intractable, we show efficient approximation algorithms to compute such probabilities. The talk is based on joint work with Marco Console and Leonid Libkin, and will be presented in PODS 2023. |
Fri 16th Sep 11:00 am 12:00 pm | Seminar Luis Galárraga Speaker : Luis Galárraga — luisgalarraga.de/about/ Title: Computing How-Provenance for SPARQL Queries via Query Rewriting Abstract: Over the past few years, we have witnessed the emergence of large knowledge graphs built by extracting and combining information from multiple sources. This has propelled many advances in query processing over knowledge graphs, however the aspect of providing provenance explanations for query results has so far been mostly neglected. In this talk I will present SPARQLprov, a method based on query rewriting, to compute how-provenance polynomials for SPARQL queries over knowledge graphs. Contrary to existing works, SPARQLprov is system-agnostic and can be applied to standard and already deployed SPARQL engines without the need of customized extensions. To do so, we rely on spm-semirings to compute polynomial annotations that respect the property of commutation with homomorphisms on monotonic and non-monotonic SPARQL queries without aggregate functions. An evaluation on real and synthetic data shows that SPARQLprov over standard engines competes with state-of-the-art solutions for how-provenance computation, while covering a larger fragment of the query language. |
Fri 1st Jul 11:00 am 12:00 pm | Séminaire Arnaud Durand |
Fri 10th Jun 10:00 am 11:00 am | Séminaire Corentin Barloy Title:The Regular Languages of First-Order Logic with One Alternation Abstract: The regular languages with a neutral letter expressible in first-order logic with one alternation are characterized. Specifically, it is shown that if an arbitrary Σ2 formula defines a regular language with a neutral letter, then there is an equivalent Σ2 formula that only uses the order predicate. This shows that the so-called Central Conjecture of Straubing holds for Σ2 over languages with a neutral letter, the first progress on the Conjecture in more than 20 years. To show the characterization, lower bounds against polynomial-size depth-3 Boolean circuits with constant top fan-in are developed. The heart of the combinatorial argument resides in studying how positions within a language are determined from one another, a technique of independent interest. |
Fri 25th Feb 11:00 am 12:00 pm | Séminaire Nico |
Fri 28th Jan 11:00 am 12:00 pm | Alexandre Vigny (visio) Title: Separator logic, expressive power and algorithmic applications Abstract: First-order logic (FO) can express many algorithmic problems on graphs, but fails to express whether two vertices are connected. We define a new logic (separator logic) by enriching FO with connectivity predicates connk(x, y, z1, . . . , zk) that hold true in a graph if there exists a path between x and y after deletion of z1, . . . , zk. In this talk I will first present a study of the expressive power of this new logic. I will then present algorithmic results for this logic on graph classes that exclude a topological minor. These results were obtained in collaboration with Michał Pilipczuk, Nicole Schirrmacher, Sebastian Siebertz, and Szymon Toruńczyk. |
Fri 21st Jan 11:00 am 12:00 pm | Aurélien Lemay in Seminar |
2021 | |
Fri 10th Dec 11:00 am 12:00 pm | Séminaire Sebastien Tavenas Title: Bornes inférieures superpolynomiales pour les circuits de profondeur constante Abstract: Tout polynôme multivarié P(X_1,...,X_n) peut être écrit comme une somme de monômes, i.e., une somme de produits de variables et de constantes du corps. La taille naturelle d'une telle expression est le nombre de monômes. Mais, que se passe-t-il si on rajoute un nouveau niveau de complexité en considérant les expressions de la forme : somme de produits de sommes (de variables et de constantes) ? Maintenant, il devient moins clair comment montrer qu'un polynôme donné n'a pas de petite expression. Dans cet exposé nous résoudrons exactement ce problème. Plus précisément, nous prouvons que certains polynômes explicites n'ont pas de représentations "somme de produits de sommes'' (SPS) de taille polynomiale. Nous pouvons aussi obtenir des résultats similaires pour les SPSP, SPSPS, etc... pour toutes les expressions de profondeur constante. " |
Thu 25th Nov 2:00 pm 3:00 pm | Nofar Carmeli in Links' Seminar |
Fri 29th Oct 11:00 am 12:00 pm | Séminaire Antoine Amarilli |
Fri 22nd Oct 11:00 am 12:00 pm | Mikaël Monet in Links' Seminar |
Fri 15th Oct 11:00 am 12:00 pm | Claire Soyez-Martin in Links' seminar |
Fri 17th Sep 11:00 am 12:00 pm | Séminaire Corentin Barloy Title: Stackless Processing of Streamed Trees Abstract: Processing tree-structured data in the streaming model is a chal-lenge: capturing regular properties of streamed trees by means of astack is costly in memory, but falling back to finite-state automata drastically limits the computational power. We propose an intermediate stackless model based on register automata equipped with a single counter, used to maintain the current depth in the tree. We explore the power of this model to validate and query streamed trees. Our main result is an effective characterization of regular path queries (RPQs) that can be evaluated stacklessly—with and without registers. In particular, we confirm the conjectured characterization of tree languages defined by DTDs that are recognizable without registers, by Segoufin and Vianu (2002), in the special case of tree languages defined by means of an RPQ. Link: paperman.name/data/pub.....0.pdf lille-Salle |
Fri 10th Sep 10:00 am 11:00 am | Séminaire de Patrick Baillot titre: Type-based complexity analysis in a parallel process calculus Abstract: Some type systems have been designed to analyse statically the time coplexity of functional languages. A natural question is whether this approach can be extended to parallel languages. We address this problem for the Pi-calculus, a paradigmatic calculus for parallel and concurrent computation. In Pi-calculus, processes communicate through channels that can carry values and channel names. We will define notions of sequential and parallel complexity for Pi-calculus, and present a type system that provides an upper bound on the time complexity of processes. This is based on joint work with Alexis Ghyselen (ESOP 2021). Based on: link.springer.com/chap.....9-3_3 |