Unlike numerical preferences, preferences on attribute values do not show an inherent total order, but skyline computation has to rely on partial orderings explicitly stated by the user. In such orders many object values are incomparable, hence skylines sizes become unpractical. However, the Pareto semantics can be modified to benefit from indifferences: skyline result sizes can be essentially reduced by allowing the user to declare some incomparable values as equally desirable. A major problem of adding such equivalences is that they may result in intransitivity of the aggregated Pareto order and thus efficient query processing is hampered. In this paper we analyze how far the strict Pareto semantics can be relaxed while always retaining t...
The skyline of a set P of multi-dimensional points (tuples) consists of those points in P for which ...
Given a data set, a top-k Skyline query returns the k most interesting elements of the Skyline query...
Skyline queries are a popular way to obtain preferred answers from the database by providing only th...
Preferences are an important natural concept in real life and are well-known in the database and art...
Abstract. There has been interest recently in skyline queries, also called Pareto queries, on relati...
Abstract Considering a group of users, each specifying individual preferences over categorical attri...
Skyline evaluation techniques (also known as Pareto preference queries) follow a common paradigm tha...
International audienceSkyline queries retrieve the most interesting objects from a database with res...
International audienceThis paper deals with database preference queries based on the skyline paradig...
Skylines assume that all attributes are equally important, as each dimension can always be traded of...
The skyline, or Pareto, operator selects those tuples that are not dominated by any others. Extendin...
The skyline operator has been proposed to bridge the gap between traditional and multimedia database...
We advocate the extension of relational database systems to support preference queries. Many databas...
Abstract Preference queries incorporate the notion of bi-nary preference relation into relational da...
The skyline of a set P of multi-dimensional points (tuples) consists of those points in P for which ...
Given a data set, a top-k Skyline query returns the k most interesting elements of the Skyline query...
Skyline queries are a popular way to obtain preferred answers from the database by providing only th...
Preferences are an important natural concept in real life and are well-known in the database and art...
Abstract. There has been interest recently in skyline queries, also called Pareto queries, on relati...
Abstract Considering a group of users, each specifying individual preferences over categorical attri...
Skyline evaluation techniques (also known as Pareto preference queries) follow a common paradigm tha...
International audienceSkyline queries retrieve the most interesting objects from a database with res...
International audienceThis paper deals with database preference queries based on the skyline paradig...
Skylines assume that all attributes are equally important, as each dimension can always be traded of...
The skyline, or Pareto, operator selects those tuples that are not dominated by any others. Extendin...
The skyline operator has been proposed to bridge the gap between traditional and multimedia database...
We advocate the extension of relational database systems to support preference queries. Many databas...
Abstract Preference queries incorporate the notion of bi-nary preference relation into relational da...
The skyline of a set P of multi-dimensional points (tuples) consists of those points in P for which ...
Given a data set, a top-k Skyline query returns the k most interesting elements of the Skyline query...
Skyline queries are a popular way to obtain preferred answers from the database by providing only th...