A famous result due to Ko and Friedman (Theoretical Computer Science 20 (1982) 323–352) asserts that the problems of integration and maximisation of a univariate real function are computationally hard in a well-defined sense. Yet, both functionals are routinely computed at great speed in practice.We aim to resolve this apparent paradox by studying classes of functions which can be feasibly integrated and maximised, together with representations for these classes of functions which encode the information which is necessary to uniformly compute integral and maximum in polynomial time. The theoretical framework for this is the second-order complexity theory for operators in analysis which was introduced by Kawamura and Cook (ACM Transactions o...
AbstractThe synthesis of (discrete) Complexity Theory with Recursive Analysis provides a quantitativ...
This paper introduces a more restrictive notion of feasibility of functionals on Baire space than th...
objects encountered in analysis, such as real functions, from the viewpoints of computability and co...
A famous result due to Ko and Friedman (Theoretical Computer Science 20 (1982) 323–352) asserts that...
A famous result due to Ko and Friedman (Theoretical Computer Science 20 (1982) 323–352) asserts that...
A famous result due to Ko and Friedman (Theoretical Computer Science 20 (1982) 323–352) asserts that...
International audienceRecursive analysis was introduced by A. Turing [1936], A. Grzegorczyk [1955], ...
[1955]. It is based on a discrete mechanical framework that can be used to model computation over th...
Abstract. In this paper, we study computability and complexity of real functions. We extend these no...
AbstractWe give a correspondence between two notions of complexity for real functions: poly-time com...
We present a Coq library that allows for readily proving that a function is computable in polynomial...
International audienceRecursive analysis was introduced by A. Turing [1936], A. Grzegorczyk [1955], ...
This PhD thesis presents progress in the search for a mathematical rigorous framework for efficient ...
This PhD thesis presents progress in the search for a mathematical rigorous framework for efficient ...
This paper investigates second-order representations in the sense of Kawamuraand Cook for spaces of ...
AbstractThe synthesis of (discrete) Complexity Theory with Recursive Analysis provides a quantitativ...
This paper introduces a more restrictive notion of feasibility of functionals on Baire space than th...
objects encountered in analysis, such as real functions, from the viewpoints of computability and co...
A famous result due to Ko and Friedman (Theoretical Computer Science 20 (1982) 323–352) asserts that...
A famous result due to Ko and Friedman (Theoretical Computer Science 20 (1982) 323–352) asserts that...
A famous result due to Ko and Friedman (Theoretical Computer Science 20 (1982) 323–352) asserts that...
International audienceRecursive analysis was introduced by A. Turing [1936], A. Grzegorczyk [1955], ...
[1955]. It is based on a discrete mechanical framework that can be used to model computation over th...
Abstract. In this paper, we study computability and complexity of real functions. We extend these no...
AbstractWe give a correspondence between two notions of complexity for real functions: poly-time com...
We present a Coq library that allows for readily proving that a function is computable in polynomial...
International audienceRecursive analysis was introduced by A. Turing [1936], A. Grzegorczyk [1955], ...
This PhD thesis presents progress in the search for a mathematical rigorous framework for efficient ...
This PhD thesis presents progress in the search for a mathematical rigorous framework for efficient ...
This paper investigates second-order representations in the sense of Kawamuraand Cook for spaces of ...
AbstractThe synthesis of (discrete) Complexity Theory with Recursive Analysis provides a quantitativ...
This paper introduces a more restrictive notion of feasibility of functionals on Baire space than th...
objects encountered in analysis, such as real functions, from the viewpoints of computability and co...