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Phokion G. Kolaitis

Researcher at University of California, Santa Cruz

Publications -  240
Citations -  10403

Phokion G. Kolaitis is an academic researcher from University of California, Santa Cruz. The author has contributed to research in topics: Data exchange & Conjunctive query. The author has an hindex of 52, co-authored 232 publications receiving 9956 citations. Previous affiliations of Phokion G. Kolaitis include Occidental College & University of Chicago.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI

Data exchange: semantics and query answering

TL;DR: This paper gives an algebraic specification that selects, among all solutions to the data exchange problem, a special class of solutions that is called universal and shows that a universal solution has no more and no less data than required for data exchange and that it represents the entire space of possible solutions.
Book ChapterDOI

Data Exchange: Semantics and Query Answering

TL;DR: The notion of "certain answers" in indefinite databases for the semantics for query answering in data exchange is adopted and the computational complexity of computing the certain answers in this context is investigated.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Conjunctive-query containment and constraint satisfaction

TL;DR: This paper examines the tractable cases of Boolean constraint-satisfaction problems and shows that they do uniformize, and exhibits three nonuniform tractability results that uniformize and give rise to polynomial-time solvable cases of constraint satisfaction and conjunctive-query containment.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the Decision Problem for Two-Variable First-Order Logic

TL;DR: In this paper, the complexity of the satisfiability problem for FO2 is shown to be NEXPTIME-complete, and it is shown that every satisfiable FO2-sentence has a model whose size is at most exponential in the size of the sentence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Data exchange: getting to the core

TL;DR: The core of a structure is the smallest substructure that is also a homomorphic image of the structure, and hence the smallest universal solution, which makes the core an ideal solution for data exchange.