We investigate the computational complexity of several decision, enumeration and counting problems related to pseudo-intents. We show that given a formal context and a set of its pseudo-intents, checking whether this context has an additional pseudo-intent is in conp and it is at least as hard as checking whether a given simple hypergraph is saturated. We also show that recognizing the set of pseudo-intents is also in conp and it is at least as hard as checking whether a given hypergraph is the transversal hypergraph of another given hypergraph. Moreover, we show that if any of these two problems turns out to be conp-hard, then unless p = np, pseudo-intents cannot be enumerated in output polynomial time. We also investigate the complexity o...
The most celebrated open problem in theoretical computer science is, undoubtedly, the problem of whe...
AbstractWe give a logic-based framework for defining counting problems and show that it exactly capt...
We study computational procedures that use both randomness and nondeterminism. Examples are Arthur-M...
Abstract. We investigate the computational complexity of several deci-sion, enumeration and counting...
Abstract. We investigate the computational complexity of several de-cision, enumeration and counting...
We investigate the computational complexity of several decision, enumeration and counting problems r...
Abstract. Pseudo-intents play a key rôle in Formal Concept Analy-sis. They are the premises of the ...
AbstractWe investigate whether the pseudo-intents of a given formal context can efficiently be enume...
Abstract. We investigate the complexity of enumerating pseudo-intents in the lectic order. We look a...
AbstractWe investigate whether the pseudo-intents of a given formal context can efficiently be enume...
Abstract. We examine the enumeration problem for essential closed sets of a formal context. Essentia...
Abstract. Generating minimal transversals of a hypergraph is an important problem which has many app...
This thesis deals with the problem of the computation of implications, which are regularities of the...
Investigating Logics for Feasible Computation The most celebrated open problem in theoretical comput...
Implications of a formal context (G, M, I) obey Armstrong rules, which allows for definition of a mi...
The most celebrated open problem in theoretical computer science is, undoubtedly, the problem of whe...
AbstractWe give a logic-based framework for defining counting problems and show that it exactly capt...
We study computational procedures that use both randomness and nondeterminism. Examples are Arthur-M...
Abstract. We investigate the computational complexity of several deci-sion, enumeration and counting...
Abstract. We investigate the computational complexity of several de-cision, enumeration and counting...
We investigate the computational complexity of several decision, enumeration and counting problems r...
Abstract. Pseudo-intents play a key rôle in Formal Concept Analy-sis. They are the premises of the ...
AbstractWe investigate whether the pseudo-intents of a given formal context can efficiently be enume...
Abstract. We investigate the complexity of enumerating pseudo-intents in the lectic order. We look a...
AbstractWe investigate whether the pseudo-intents of a given formal context can efficiently be enume...
Abstract. We examine the enumeration problem for essential closed sets of a formal context. Essentia...
Abstract. Generating minimal transversals of a hypergraph is an important problem which has many app...
This thesis deals with the problem of the computation of implications, which are regularities of the...
Investigating Logics for Feasible Computation The most celebrated open problem in theoretical comput...
Implications of a formal context (G, M, I) obey Armstrong rules, which allows for definition of a mi...
The most celebrated open problem in theoretical computer science is, undoubtedly, the problem of whe...
AbstractWe give a logic-based framework for defining counting problems and show that it exactly capt...
We study computational procedures that use both randomness and nondeterminism. Examples are Arthur-M...