资源论文The Parameterized Complexity of Cascading Portfolio Scheduling

The Parameterized Complexity of Cascading Portfolio Scheduling

2020-02-21 | |  69 |   35 |   0

Abstract

Cascading portfolio scheduling is a static algorithm selection strategy which uses a sample of test instances to compute an optimal ordering (a cascading schedule) of a portfolio of available algorithms. The algorithms are then applied to each future instance according to this cascading schedule, until some algorithm in the schedule succeeds. Cascading scheduling has proven to be effective in several applications, including QBF solving and generation of ImageNet classification models. It is known that the computation of an optimal cascading schedule in the offline phase is NP-hard. In this paper we study the parameterized complexity of this problem and establish its fixed-parameter tractability by utilizing structural properties of the success relation between algorithms and test instances. Our findings are significant as they reveal that in spite of the intractability of the problem in its general form, one can indeed exploit sparseness or density of the success relation to obtain non-trivial runtime guarantees for finding an optimal cascading schedule.

上一篇:Learning Dynamics of Attention: Human Prior for Interpretable Machine Reasoning

下一篇:Algorithm-Dependent Generalization Bounds for Overparameterized Deep Residual Networks

用户评价
全部评价

热门资源

  • The Variational S...

    Unlike traditional images which do not offer in...

  • Learning to Predi...

    Much of model-based reinforcement learning invo...

  • Stratified Strate...

    In this paper we introduce Stratified Strategy ...

  • A Mathematical Mo...

    Direct democracy, where each voter casts one vo...

  • Joint Pose and Ex...

    Facial expression recognition (FER) is a challe...