SAT 2005
Satisfiability Research in the Year 2005
1 edition
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Author
Contributions
- Enrico Giunchiglia (Editor) - Contributor
- Toby Walsh (Editor) - Contributor
Publication
2006-11-01 - Springer
Language
English
Word Count
73,250 words, Guess
Page Count
293 pages
Physical Format
Hardcover
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL8371894M
- ISBN-139781402045523
- ISBN-101402045522
- OCLC Control Number123201981
- OCLC Control Numbersatsatisfiabilit2005giun
and 2 more
- Library of Congress Control Number2007398861
- Goodreads3393522
Classifications
- LCCQA76.9.A43 S28 2006
Description
This book is devoted to recent progress made in solving propositional satisfiability and related problems. Propositional satisfiability is a powerful and general formalism used to solve a wide range of important problems including hardware and software verification. The core of many reasoning problems in automated deduction are propositional. Research into methods to automate such reasoning has therefore a long history in artificial intelligence. In 1957, Allen Newell and Herb Simon introduced the Logic Theory Machine to prove propositional theorems from Whitehead and Russel's "Principia mathematica". In 1960, Martin Davis and Hillary Putnam introduced their eponymous decision procedure for satisfiability reasoning (though, for space reasons, it was quickly superseded by the modified procedure proposed by Martin Davis, George Logemann and Donald Loveland two years later). In 1971, Stephen Cook's proof that propositional satisfiability is NP-Complete placed satisfiability as the cornerstone of complexity theory. As this volume demonstrates, research has continued very actively in this area since then. This book follows on from the highly successful volume entitled SAT 2000 published five years ago. The papers in SAT 2005 fall (not entirely neatly) into the following categories: complete methods, local and stochastic search methods, random problems, applications, and extensions beyond the propositional.
Subjects
Topics
Other Editions
- SAT 2005: Satisfiability Research in the Year 2005
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