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CPM
2000
Springer

Explaining and Controlling Ambiguity in Dynamic Programming

14 years 5 months ago
Explaining and Controlling Ambiguity in Dynamic Programming
Abstract. Ambiguity in dynamic programming arises from two independent sources, the non-uniqueness of optimal solutions and the particular recursion scheme by which the search space is evaluated. Ambiguity, unless explicitly considered, leads to unnecessarily complicated, in exible, and sometimes even incorrect dynamic programming algorithms. Building upon the recently developed algebraic approach to dynamic programming, we formalize the notions of ambiguity and canonicity. We argue that the use of canonical yield grammars leads to transparent and versatile dynamic programming algorithms. They provide a master copy of recurrences, that can solve all DP problems in a well-de ned domain. We demonstrate the advantages of such a systematic approach using problems from the areas of RNA folding and pairwise sequence comparison. 1 Motivation and Overview
Robert Giegerich
Added 02 Aug 2010
Updated 02 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 2000
Where CPM
Authors Robert Giegerich
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