AbstractAlgebraic models of real computation and their induced notions of time complexity neglect stability issues of numerical algorithms. Recursive Analysis on the other hand appropriately describes stable numerical computations while, based on Turing Machines, usually lacks significant lower complexity bounds.We propose a synthesis of the two models, namely a restriction of algebraic algorithms to computable primitives. These are thus inherently stable and allow for nontrivial complexity considerations. In this model, one can prove on a sound mathematical foundation the empirically well-known observation that stability and speed may be contradictory goals in algorithm design.More precisely we show that solving the geometric point locatio...
We study the complexity of some computational problems in case certain stability guarantees are requ...
We consider the intrinsic complexity of selected algorithmic problems of classical elimination theor...
ABSTRACT We reexamine fundamental problems from computational geometry in the word RAM model, where ...
AbstractAlgebraic models of real computation and their induced notions of time complexity neglect st...
We show that proving lower bounds in algebraic models of computation may not be easier than in the s...
We show that proving lower bounds in algebraic models of computation may not be easier than in the s...
(eng) We show that proving lower bounds in algebraic models of computation may not be easier than in...
We provide machine-independent characterizations of some complexity classes, over an arbitrary struc...
We provide machine-independent characterizations of some complexity classes, over an arbitrary struc...
AbstractThere is a dependency between computability of algorithmic complexity and decidability of di...
AbstractWe study the complexity of some computational problems in case certain stability guarantees ...
AbstractWe study the complexity of some computational problems in case certain stability guarantees ...
We show that proving lower bounds in algebraic models of computation may not be easier than in the s...
We say that an algorithm is stable if small changes in the input result in small changes in the outp...
AbstractWe give new positive and negative results, some conditional, on speeding up computational al...
We study the complexity of some computational problems in case certain stability guarantees are requ...
We consider the intrinsic complexity of selected algorithmic problems of classical elimination theor...
ABSTRACT We reexamine fundamental problems from computational geometry in the word RAM model, where ...
AbstractAlgebraic models of real computation and their induced notions of time complexity neglect st...
We show that proving lower bounds in algebraic models of computation may not be easier than in the s...
We show that proving lower bounds in algebraic models of computation may not be easier than in the s...
(eng) We show that proving lower bounds in algebraic models of computation may not be easier than in...
We provide machine-independent characterizations of some complexity classes, over an arbitrary struc...
We provide machine-independent characterizations of some complexity classes, over an arbitrary struc...
AbstractThere is a dependency between computability of algorithmic complexity and decidability of di...
AbstractWe study the complexity of some computational problems in case certain stability guarantees ...
AbstractWe study the complexity of some computational problems in case certain stability guarantees ...
We show that proving lower bounds in algebraic models of computation may not be easier than in the s...
We say that an algorithm is stable if small changes in the input result in small changes in the outp...
AbstractWe give new positive and negative results, some conditional, on speeding up computational al...
We study the complexity of some computational problems in case certain stability guarantees are requ...
We consider the intrinsic complexity of selected algorithmic problems of classical elimination theor...
ABSTRACT We reexamine fundamental problems from computational geometry in the word RAM model, where ...