Évènement spécial
Jeudi 20 septembre 2018, 10 heures 30, Amphi Turing (bâtiment Sophie Germain)
Leonid Libkin (University of Edinburgh) Certain Answers Meet Zero-One Laws
This measure is defined as the probability that the query is true under a random interpretation of missing information in a database. Since there are infinitely many such interpretations, to pick one at random we adopt the approach used in the study of asymptotic properties and 0-1 laws for logical sentences and define the measure as the limit of a sequence. We show that in the standard model of missing data, the 0-1 law is observed: this limit always exists and can be only 0 or 1 for a very large class of queries. Thus, query answers are either almost certainly true, or almost certainly false, and this classification behaves very well computationally. When databases satisfy constraints, the measure is defined as the conditional probability of the query being true if the constraints are true. This can now be an arbitrary rational number, which is always computable. Another refinement of the notion of certainty views answers with a larger set of interpretations that make them true as better ones. We pinpoint the exact complexity of finding best answers for first-order queries.
Évènement spécial
Jeudi 5 juillet 2018, 14 heures, Salle 3052
Laurent Viennot (Inria Paris et IRIF) Introduction to the blockchain
Évènement spécial
Mardi 20 février 2018, 14 heures, 3052
Daniela Petrisan (IRIF) Up-To Techniques for Behavioural Metrics via Fibrations
behavioural equivalences between systems. In this talk, I introduce up-to techniques for behavioural metrics in a coalgebraic setting and provide general results that show under which conditions such up-to techniques are sound.
For a system modelled as a coalgebra for a certain functor, the behavioural distance can be seen as a coinductive predicate using a suitable lifting of the functor. I will focus on the so called Wasserstein lifting of a functor for which we provide a new characterization in a fibrational setting. This is useful for automatically proving the soundness of up-to techniques via a generic framework developed in a previous CSL-LICS'14 paper.
I will use fibrations of predicates and relations valued in a quantale, for which pseudo-metric spaces are an example. To illustrate our framework I provide an example on distances between regular languages.
Évènement spécial
Jeudi 1 février 2018, 14 heures, 3052
Vincent Danos (ENS) Contractivity of Markov chains (metric couplings)
Évènement spécial
Mardi 30 janvier 2018, 14 heures, 3052
Vincent Danos (ENS) Bayesian inversion and approximation
Évènement spécial
Jeudi 25 janvier 2018, 14 heures, 3052
Prakash Panangaden (McGill University) Quantitative equational logic and free Kantorovich algebras
Évènement spécial
Mardi 23 janvier 2018, 14 heures, 3052
Prakash Panangaden (McGill University) Metrics for LMPs
Évènement spécial
Jeudi 18 janvier 2018, 14 heures, 3052
Prakash Panangaden (McGill University) A dual point of view: LMPs as function transformers
Évènement spécial
Mardi 16 janvier 2018, 14 heures, 3052
Prakash Panangaden (McGill University) Introduction to LMPs: bisimulation, simulation, logical characterization