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Publications

2023

EU3DIGITAL - ENSURING THE SUCCESS AND SUSTAINABILITY OF THIRD SECTOR ORGANISATIONS AND SOCIAL ENTERPRISES BY BOOSTING DIGITAL SKILLS AND COMPETENCES USING TRAINING RESOURCES

Authors
Aguiar, A; Soeiro, A; Jacklin-Jarvis, C; Foster, T;

Publication
EDULEARN Proceedings - EDULEARN23 Proceedings

Abstract

2023

Quantitative Global Memory

Authors
Alves, S; Kesner, D; Ramos, M;

Publication
LOGIC, LANGUAGE, INFORMATION, AND COMPUTATION, WOLLIC 2023

Abstract
We show that recent approaches to static analysis based on quantitative typing systems can be extended to programming languages with global state. More precisely, we define a call-by-value language equipped with operations to access a global memory, together with a semantic model based on a (tight) multi-type system that captures exact measures of time and space related to evaluation of programs. We show that the type system is quantitatively sound and complete with respect to the operational semantics of the language.

2023

Novel integer programming models for the stable kidney exchange problem

Authors
Klimentova, X; Biró, P; Viana, A; Costa, V; Pedroso, JP;

Publication
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF OPERATIONAL RESEARCH

Abstract
Kidney exchange programs (KEPs) represent an additional possibility of transplant for patients suffering from end-stage kidney disease. If a patient has a willing living donor with whom the patient is not compatible, the pair recipient-donor can join a pool of incompatible pairs and, if compatibility between recipient and donor in two or more pairs exists, organs can be exchanged between them. The problem can be modelled as an integer program that in general aims at finding the pairs that should be selected for transplant such that maximum number of transplants is performed. In this paper, we consider that for each recipient there may exist a preference order over the organs that he/she can receive, since a recipient may be compatible with several donors but the level of compatibility with the recipient might vary for different donors. Under this setting, the aim is to find the maximum cardinality stable exchange, a solution where no blocking cycle exists, i.e., there is no cycle such that all recipients prefer the donor in that cycle rather than that in the exchange. For this purpose we propose four novel integer programming models based on the well-known edge and cycle formulations, and also on the position-indexed formulation. These formulations are adjusted for both finding stable and strongly stable exchanges under strict preferences and for the case when ties in preferences may exist. Further-more, we study a situation when the stability requirement can be relaxed by addressing the trade-off between maximum cardinality versus number of blocking cycles allowed in a solution. The effectiveness of the proposed models is assessed through extensive computational experiments on a wide set of in-stances. Results show that the cycle-edge and position-indexed formulations outperform the other two formulations. Another important practical outcome is that targeting strongly stable solutions has a much higher negative impact on the number of transplants (with an average reduction of up to 20% for the bigger instances), when compared to stable solutions.

2023

A Survey of Advanced Computer Vision Techniques for Sports

Authors
Neves, TM; Meireles, L; Moreira, JM;

Publication
CoRR

Abstract

2023

Demonstration of Simulation Tools for Electricity Markets considering Power Flow Analysis

Authors
Veiga, B; Santos, G; Pinto, T; Faia, R; Ramos, C; Vale, Z;

Publication

Abstract

2023

Behind-the-Meter Solar Disaggregation: The Value of Information

Authors
R.A, SMN; Mahmoodi, M; Attarha, A; Iria, J; Scott, P; Gordon, D;

Publication
2023 IEEE PES 15th Asia-Pacific Power and Energy Engineering Conference (APPEEC)

Abstract

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