Search


Volume

Author

Year

  • < Previous
  • 1
  • Next >
5 results

Unary negation

Luc Segoufin ; Balder ten Cate.
We study fragments of first-order logic and of least fixed point logic that allow only unary negation: negation of formulas with at most one free variable. These logics generalize many interesting known formalisms, including modal logic and the $\mu$-calculus, as well as conjunctive queries and&nbsp;[&hellip;]
Published on September 24, 2013

Datalog Rewritings of Regular Path Queries using Views

Nadime Francis ; Luc Segoufin ; Cristina Sirangelo.
We consider query answering using views on graph databases, i.e. databases structured as edge-labeled graphs. We mainly consider views and queries specified by Regular Path Queries (RPQ). These are queries selecting pairs of nodes in a graph database that are connected via a path whose sequence of&nbsp;[&hellip;]
Published on December 22, 2015

Deciding definability in FO2(<h,<v) on trees

Thomas Place ; Luc Segoufin.
We provide a decidable characterization of regular forest languages definable in FO2(<h,<v). By FO2(<h,<v) we refer to the two variable fragment of first order logic built from the descendant relation and the following sibling relation. In terms of expressive power it corresponds to a fragment of&nbsp;[&hellip;]
Published on September 1, 2015

Tameness and the power of programs over monoids in DA

Nathan Grosshans ; Pierre Mckenzie ; Luc Segoufin.
The program-over-monoid model of computation originates with Barrington's proof that the model captures the complexity class $\mathsf{NC^1}$. Here we make progress in understanding the subtleties of the model. First, we identify a new tameness condition on a class of monoids that entails a natural&nbsp;[&hellip;]
Published on August 2, 2022

Enumerating Answers to First-Order Queries over Databases of Low Degree

Arnaud Durand ; Nicole Schweikardt ; Luc Segoufin.
A class of relational databases has low degree if for all $\delta>0$, all but finitely many databases in the class have degree at most $n^{\delta}$, where $n$ is the size of the database. Typical examples are databases of bounded degree or of degree bounded by $\log n$. It is known that over a&nbsp;[&hellip;]
Published on May 10, 2022

  • < Previous
  • 1
  • Next >