RWTH Aachen
Power Iterated Color Refinement
Kersting, Kristian (TU Dortmund University and Fraunhofer IAIS) | Mladenov, Martin (TU Dortmund University) | Garnett, Roman (University of Bonn) | Grohe, Martin (RWTH Aachen)
Color refinement is a basic algorithmic routine for graph isomorphismtesting and has recently been used for computing graph kernels as well as for lifting belief propagation and linear programming. So far, color refinement has been treated as a combinatorial problem. Instead, we treat it as a nonlinear continuous optimization problem and prove thatit implements a conditional gradient optimizer that can be turned into graph clustering approaches using hashing and truncated power iterations. This shows that color refinement is easy to understand in terms of random walks, easy to implement (matrix-matrix/vector multiplications) and readily parallelizable. We support our theoretical results with experiments on real-world graphs with millions of edges.
On First-Order Definability and Computability of Progression for Local-Effect Actions and Beyond
Liu, Yongmei (Sun Yat-sen University) | Lakemeyer, Gerhard (RWTH Aachen)
In a seminal paper, Lin and Reiter introduced the notion of progression for basic action theories in the situation calculus. Unfortunately, progression is not first-order definable in general. Recently, Vassos, Lakemeyer, and Levesque showed that in case actions have only local effects, progression is first-order representable. However, they could show computability of the first-order representation only for a restricted class. Also, their proofs were quite involved. In this paper, we present a result stronger than theirs that for local-effect actions, progression is always first-order definable and computable. We give a very simple proof for this via the concept of forgetting. We also show first-order definability and computability results for a class of knowledge bases and actions with non-local effects. Moreover, for a certain class of local-effect actions and knowledge bases for representing disjunctive information, we show that progression is not only first-order definable but also efficiently computable.