2004
Authors
Costa, VS; Srinivasan, A; Camacho, R; Blockeel, H; Demoen, B; Janssens, G; Struyf, J; Vandecasteele, H; Van Laer, W;
Publication
JOURNAL OF MACHINE LEARNING RESEARCH
Abstract
Relatively simple transformations can speed up the execution of queries for data mining considerably. While some ILP systems use such transformations, relatively little is known about them or how they relate to each other. This paper describes a number of such transformations. Not all of them are novel, but there have been no studies comparing their efficacy. The main contributions of the paper are: (a) it clarifies the relationship between the transformations; (b) it contains an empirical study of what can be gained by applying the transformations; and (c) it provides some guidance on the kinds of problems that are likely to benefit from the transformations.
2004
Authors
Vargas, PK; De Castro Dutra, I; Geyer, CFR;
Publication
ACM International Conference Proceeding Series
Abstract
Several works on grid computing have been proposed in the last years. However, most of them, including available software, can not deal properly with some issues related to control of applications that spread a very large number of tasks across the grid network. This work presents a step toward solving the problem of controlling such applications. We propose and discuss an architectural model called GRAND (Grid Robust ApplicatioN Deployment) based on partitioning and hierarchical submission and control of such applications. The main contribution of our model is to be able to control the execution of a huge number of distributed tasks while preserving data locality and reducing the load of the submit machines. We propose a taxonomy to classify application models to run in grid environments and partitioning methods. We also present our application description language GRID-ADL. Copyright 2004 ACM.
2004
Authors
De Oliveira, EPG; Ramos, F; De Dutra, IC; De Castro, MCS;
Publication
Proceedings of the IASTED International Conference on Parallel and Distributed Computing and Systems
Abstract
This work investigates the impact of hybrid coherence protocols on non-scientific applications. We use execution-driven simulation of a scalable multiprocessor and compare the results obtained with a hybrid protocol with a well-known invalidate protocol and an update-based protocol. Our results show that for our sample programs a hybrid protocol with high threshold outperforms both the invalidate-based and update-based protocols, regardless of the type of parallelism exhibited by the benchmarks. We conclude that our applications can benefit from a hybrid protocol, and that multiprocessors designed for running these systems efficiently should adopt some form of hybrid protocol.
2003
Authors
Figueira, AR; Paulino, H; Lopes, L; Silva, F;
Publication
JOURNAL OF UNIVERSAL COMPUTER SCIENCE
Abstract
We describe a programming language for distributed computations that supports mobile resources and is based on a process calculus. The syntax, semantics and implementation of the language are presented with a focus on the novel model of computation.
2003
Authors
Paulino, H; Lopes, L; Silva, F;
Publication
WEB ENGINEERING, PROCEEDINGS
Abstract
Mobile agents are the latest software technology to program flexible and efficient distributed applications. Most current systems implement semantics that are hard if not impossible to prove correct. In this paper we present MOB, a scripting language for Internet agents encoded on top of a process calculus and with provably sound semantics.
2003
Authors
Fonseca, N; Costa, VS; Silva, F; Camacho, R;
Publication
PROGRESS IN ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
Abstract
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