The easy-hard-easy pattern in the difficulty of combinatorial search problems as constraints are added has been explained as due to a competition between the decrease in number of solutions and increased pruning. We test the generality of this explanation by examining one of its predictions: if the number of solutions is held fixed by the choice of problems, then increased pruning should lead to a monotonic decrease in search cost. Instead, we find the easy-hard-easy pattern in median search cost even when the number of solutions is held constant, for some search methods. This generalizes previous observations of this pattern and shows that the existing theory does not explain the full range of the peak in search cost. In these cases the pa...
We address the question: "Are some classes of combinatorial optimization problems intrinsically...
the date of receipt and acceptance should be inserted later Abstract The ability to model search in ...
Many practical problems have the goal of identifying, with limited resources, a small number of obje...
The easy-hard-easy pattern in the di culty of combinatorial search problems as constraints are added...
AbstractMany recent studies have identified phase transitions from under- to overconstrained instanc...
We introduce a parameter that measures the 'constrainedness' of an ensemble of combinatorial problem...
The ability to model search in a constraint solver can be an essential asset for solving combinatori...
The ability to model search in a constraint solver can be an essential asset for solving combinatori...
Many types of problem exhibit a phase transition as a problem parameter is varied, from a region whe...
A general rule of thumb is to tackle the hardest part of a search problem first. Many heuristics the...
Heuristic search algorithms (eg. A* and IDA*) with accurate lower bounds can solve impressively larg...
We show that a rescaled constrainedness parameter provides the basis for accurate numerical models o...
Heuristic search remains a leading approach to difficult combinatorial optimization problems. Search...
AbstractThe aim of this paper is to introduce the reader to combinatorial search theory and to give ...
This paper closes a gap in the foundations of the theory of average case complexity. First, we clari...
We address the question: "Are some classes of combinatorial optimization problems intrinsically...
the date of receipt and acceptance should be inserted later Abstract The ability to model search in ...
Many practical problems have the goal of identifying, with limited resources, a small number of obje...
The easy-hard-easy pattern in the di culty of combinatorial search problems as constraints are added...
AbstractMany recent studies have identified phase transitions from under- to overconstrained instanc...
We introduce a parameter that measures the 'constrainedness' of an ensemble of combinatorial problem...
The ability to model search in a constraint solver can be an essential asset for solving combinatori...
The ability to model search in a constraint solver can be an essential asset for solving combinatori...
Many types of problem exhibit a phase transition as a problem parameter is varied, from a region whe...
A general rule of thumb is to tackle the hardest part of a search problem first. Many heuristics the...
Heuristic search algorithms (eg. A* and IDA*) with accurate lower bounds can solve impressively larg...
We show that a rescaled constrainedness parameter provides the basis for accurate numerical models o...
Heuristic search remains a leading approach to difficult combinatorial optimization problems. Search...
AbstractThe aim of this paper is to introduce the reader to combinatorial search theory and to give ...
This paper closes a gap in the foundations of the theory of average case complexity. First, we clari...
We address the question: "Are some classes of combinatorial optimization problems intrinsically...
the date of receipt and acceptance should be inserted later Abstract The ability to model search in ...
Many practical problems have the goal of identifying, with limited resources, a small number of obje...