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Jendrik Seipp

Bio: Jendrik Seipp is an academic researcher from University of Basel. The author has contributed to research in topics: Heuristics & Heuristic. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 32 publications receiving 408 citations. Previous affiliations of Jendrik Seipp include University of Freiburg & Linköping University.

Papers
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Proceedings Article
25 Jan 2015
TL;DR: It is argued that this requirement for non-negative operator costs is not necessary and the benefit of using general cost partitioning is demonstrated, and it is shown that LP heuristics for operator-counting constraints are cost-partitionedHeuristics and that the state equation heuristic computes a cost partitioned over atomic projections.
Abstract: Operator cost partitioning is a well-known technique to make admissible heuristics additive by distributing the operator costs among individual heuristics. Planning tasks are usually defined with non-negative operator costs and therefore it appears natural to demand the same for the distributed costs. We argue that this requirement is not necessary and demonstrate the benefit of using general cost partitioning. We show that LP heuristics for operator-counting constraints are cost-partitioned heuristics and that the state equation heuristic computes a cost partitioning over atomic projections. We also introduce a new family of potential heuristics and show their relationship to general cost partitioning.

69 citations

Proceedings Article
02 Jun 2013
TL;DR: This work proposes a CEGAR algorithm for computing abstraction heuristics for optimal classical planning by iteratively compute an optimal abstract solution, check if and why it fails for the concrete planning task and refine the abstraction so that the same failure cannot occur in future iterations.
Abstract: Counterexample-guided abstraction refinement (CEGAR) is a method for incrementally computing abstractions of transition systems. We propose a CEGAR algorithm for computing abstraction heuristics for optimal classical planning. Starting from a coarse abstraction of the planning task, we iteratively compute an optimal abstract solution, check if and why it fails for the concrete planning task and refine the abstraction so that the same failure cannot occur in future iterations. A key ingredient of our approach is a novel class of abstractions for classical planning tasks that admits efficient and very fine-grained refinement. Our implementation performs tens of thousands of refinement steps in a few minutes and produces heuristics that are often significantly more accurate than pattern database heuristics of the same size.

60 citations

Proceedings Article
25 Jan 2015
TL;DR: It is shown theoretically that Cedalion yields portfolios provably within a constant factor of optimal for the training set distribution, and results demonstrate that - without any knowledge of planning or FD - Cedalion constructs sequential FD portfolios that rival, and in some cases substantially outperform, manually-built FD portfolios.
Abstract: Sequential planning portfolios exploit the complementary strengths of different planners. Similarly, automated algorithm configuration tools can customize parameterized planning algorithms for a given type of tasks. Although some work has been done towards combining portfolios and algorithm configuration, the problem of automatically generating a sequential planning portfolio from a parameterized planner for a given type of tasks is still largely unsolved. Here, we present Cedalion, a conceptually simple approach for this problem that greedily searches for the (parameter configuration, runtime) pair which, when appended to the current portfolio, maximizes portfolio improvement per additional runtime spent. We show theoretically that Cedalion yields portfolios provably within a constant factor of optimal for the training set distribution. We evaluate Cedalion empirically by applying it to construct sequential planning portfolios based on component planners from the highly parameterized Fast Downward (FD) framework. Results for a broad range of planning settings demonstrate that - without any knowledge of planning or FD - Cedalion constructs sequential FD portfolios that rival, and in some cases substantially outperform, manually-built FD portfolios.

47 citations

Proceedings Article
25 Jun 2012
TL;DR: This work lets the automatic parameter tuning framework ParamILS find fast configurations of the Fast Downward planning system for a number of planning domains and presents a portfolio planner that runs automatically configured planners.
Abstract: Portfolio planners and parameter tuning are two ideas that have recently attracted significant attention in the domain-independent planning community. We combine these two ideas and present a portfolio planner that runs automatically configured planners. We let the automatic parameter tuning framework ParamILS find fast configurations of the Fast Downward planning system for a number of planning domains. Afterwards we learn a portfolio of those planner configurations. Evaluation of our portfolio planner on the IPC 2011 domains shows that it has a significantly higher IPC score than the winner of the sequential satisficing track.

46 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work proposes a CEGAR algorithm for computing abstraction heuristics for optimal classical planning, and introduces two methods for producing diverse sets ofHeuristics within this framework, one based on goal atoms, the other based on landmarks.
Abstract: Counterexample-guided abstraction refinement (CEGAR) is a method for incrementally computing abstractions of transition systems. We propose a CEGAR algorithm for computing abstraction heuristics for optimal classical planning. Starting from a coarse abstraction of the planning task, we iteratively compute an optimal abstract solution, check if and why it fails for the concrete planning task and refine the abstraction so that the same failure cannot occur in future iterations. A key ingredient of our approach is a novel class of abstractions for classical planning tasks that admits efficient and very fine-grained refinement. Since a single abstraction usually cannot capture enough details of the planning task, we also introduce two methods for producing diverse sets of heuristics within this framework, one based on goal atoms, the other based on landmarks. In order to sum their heuristic estimates admissibly we introduce a new cost partitioning algorithm called saturated cost partitioning. We show that the resulting heuristics outperform other state-of-the-art abstraction heuristics in many benchmark domains.

42 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
01 Apr 1988-Nature
TL;DR: In this paper, a sedimentological core and petrographic characterisation of samples from eleven boreholes from the Lower Carboniferous of Bowland Basin (Northwest England) is presented.
Abstract: Deposits of clastic carbonate-dominated (calciclastic) sedimentary slope systems in the rock record have been identified mostly as linearly-consistent carbonate apron deposits, even though most ancient clastic carbonate slope deposits fit the submarine fan systems better. Calciclastic submarine fans are consequently rarely described and are poorly understood. Subsequently, very little is known especially in mud-dominated calciclastic submarine fan systems. Presented in this study are a sedimentological core and petrographic characterisation of samples from eleven boreholes from the Lower Carboniferous of Bowland Basin (Northwest England) that reveals a >250 m thick calciturbidite complex deposited in a calciclastic submarine fan setting. Seven facies are recognised from core and thin section characterisation and are grouped into three carbonate turbidite sequences. They include: 1) Calciturbidites, comprising mostly of highto low-density, wavy-laminated bioclast-rich facies; 2) low-density densite mudstones which are characterised by planar laminated and unlaminated muddominated facies; and 3) Calcidebrites which are muddy or hyper-concentrated debrisflow deposits occurring as poorly-sorted, chaotic, mud-supported floatstones. These

9,929 citations

01 Jan 2007
TL;DR: A translation apparatus is provided which comprises an inputting section for inputting a source document in a natural language and a layout analyzing section for analyzing layout information.
Abstract: A translation apparatus is provided which comprises: an inputting section for inputting a source document in a natural language; a layout analyzing section for analyzing layout information including cascade information, itemization information, numbered itemization information, labeled itemization information and separator line information in the source document inputted by the inputting section and specifying a translation range on the basis of the layout information; a translation processing section for translating a source document text in the specified translation range into a second language; and an outputting section for outputting a translated text provided by the translation processing section.

740 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Concepts for articles or notes should entice the prospective reader into exploring the subject of the paper and should make it clear to the reader why this paper is interesting and important.
Abstract: s for articles or notes should entice the prospective reader into exploring the subject of the paper and should make it clear to the reader why this paper is interesting and important. The abstract should highlight the concepts of the paper rather than summarize the mechanics. The abstract is the first impression of the paper, not a technical summary of the paper. Excessive use of notation is discouraged as it can limit the interest of the broad readership of the MAA and can limit searchability of the article. Letters to the editor on any topic are invited. Comments, criticisms, and suggestions for making the Monthly more lively, entertaining, and informative can be forwarded to editor Susan Colley. Formatting and templates Authors who use LaTeX are urged to use the Monthly template and maa-monthly.sty (and its standard environments) with no custom formatting. Journal names in references should match those used on MathSciNet. For filler, please download and use the following Monthly filler template. References References should be presented in a separate section at the end of the document. The references should be listed alphabetically by the first author’s last name, then, as needed, by the co-author’s last names and the resource’s

223 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The merge-and-shrink abstraction as mentioned in this paper is a new paradigm that allows to compactly represent a more general class of abstractions, strictly dominating pattern databases in theory, and it can be adapted to this framework in a way that still guarantees perfect heuristic functions, while potentially reducing abstraction size exponentially.
Abstract: Many areas of computer science require answering questions about reachability in compactly described discrete transition systems. Answering such questions effectively requires techniques to be able to do so without building the entire system. In particular, heuristic search uses lower-bounding (“admissible”) heuristic functions to prune parts of the system known to not contain an optimal solution. A prominent technique for deriving such bounds is to consider abstract transition systems that aggregate groups of states into one. The key question is how to design and represent such abstractions. The most successful answer to this question are pattern databases, which aggregate states if and only if they agree on a subset of the state variables. Merge-and-shrink abstraction is a new paradigm that, as we show, allows to compactly represent a more general class of abstractions, strictly dominating pattern databases in theory. We identify the maximal class of transition systems, which we call factored transition systems, to which merge-and-shrink applies naturally, and we show that the well-known notion of bisimilarity can be adapted to this framework in a way that still guarantees perfect heuristic functions, while potentially reducing abstraction size exponentially. Applying these ideas to planning, one of the foundational subareas of artificial intelligence, we show that in some benchmarks this size reduction leads to the computation of perfect heuristic functions in polynomial time and that more approximate merge-and-shrink strategies yield heuristic functions competitive with the state of the art.

118 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Cl claspfolio 2 as discussed by the authors is a modular and open solver architecture that integrates several different portfolio-based algorithm selection approaches and techniques, such as feature generators, solver selection approaches, solvers portfolios, as well as solver-schedule-based pre-solving techniques.
Abstract: Building on the award-winning, portfolio-based ASP solver claspfolio, we present claspfolio 2, a modular and open solver architecture that integrates several different portfolio-based algorithm selection approaches and techniques The claspfolio 2 solver framework supports various feature generators, solver selection approaches, solver portfolios, as well as solver-schedule-based pre-solving techniques The default configuration of claspfolio 2 relies on a light-weight version of the ASP solver clasp to generate static and dynamic instance features The flexible open design of claspfolio 2 is a distinguishing factor even beyond ASP As such, it provides a unique framework for comparing and combining existing portfolio-based algorithm selection approaches and techniques in a single, unified framework Taking advantage of this, we conducted an extensive experimental study to assess the impact of different feature sets, selection approaches and base solver portfolios In addition to gaining substantial insights into the utility of the various approaches and techniques, we identified a default configuration of claspfolio 2 that achieves substantial performance gains not only over clasp's default configuration and the earlier version of claspfolio, but also over manually tuned configurations of clasp

90 citations