WEPA is a new international forum for researchers in the area of design, analysis, experimental evaluation and engineering of algorithms for enumeration problems on graphs, strings, and other domains. The objective of the workshop is to gather researchers working in enumeration algorithms, including their applications in Biology, Data Mining, Logic, and Database. The goal is to present recent results, identify and explore directions for future research, and foster collaborations.
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11:00-11:30 |
Opnening |
11:30-12:30 |
Invited Talk by Takashi Horiyama, Saitama University, Japan Enumeration with Isomorphism Elimination Abstract In many situations, we come across the symmetries of the instances. For example, a cube has 24 rotational symmetries (8 rotations by 120 degrees, 6 rotations by 90 degrees, 9 rotations by 180 degrees, and the identity). If we also take the inversion into consideration, the number of the symmetries will be doubled, i.e., a cube has 48 symmetries. If the elements of a given instance are labeled,f enumeration algorithms can use the labels. If, unfortunately, there are no labels, we are required to eliminate isomorphic solutions. For example, by cutting some edges of a cube, we can have its development. If we rotate the position of the cutting edges by 90 degrees, we again have a development. If the edges are labeled, we can distinguish these two developments by their labels. If they are not labeled, the two developments are of the same shape, i.e., they are isomorphic to each other. For the enumeration in this case, we cannot generate isomorphic developments twice. In this talk, we will discuss enumeration with isomorphism elimination. |
12:30-14:00 | Lunch Break |
Track A | |
14:00-14:30 |
Oscar Defrain and Lhouari Nourine Dualization in lattices given by implicational bases |
14:30-15:00 |
Oscar Defrain, Lhouari Nourine and Simon Vilmin Translating between the representations of a ranked convex geometry |
15:00-15:30 |
Katsuhisa Yamanaka, Takashi Horiyama, Yoshio Okamoto, Ryuhei Uehara and Tanami Yamauchi Enumeration of Surrounding Polygons |
15:30-16:00 | Coffee Break |
Track B | |
16:00-16:30 |
Kazuhiro Kurita, Kunihiro Wasa, Takeaki Uno and Hiroki Arimura A Constant Amortized Time Enumeration Algorithm for Independent Sets in Graphs with Bounded Clique Number |
16:30-17:00 |
Hisao Tamaki A simple algorithm for generating potential maximal cliques of a graph |
17:00-19:00 | Working Session |
Track C | |
9:00-9:30 |
Naveed Ahmed Azam, Aleksandar Shurbevski and Hiroshi Nagamochi Counting Tree-Like Graphs with a Given Number of Vertices and Self-loops |
9:30-10:00 |
Kazuya Haraguchi and Hiroshi Nagamochi Experimental Comparison of Connector Enumeration Algorithms |
10:00-10:30 |
Ester Livshits, Alireza Heidari, Ihab F. Ilyas and Benny Kimelfeld Enumerating Approximate Denial Constraints |
10:30-11:00 | Coffee Break |
11:00-12:00 | Invited Talk by David Avis, Kyoto University and McGill University The thirtieth year of reverse search Abstract In October 1990 Komei Fukuda and I were discussing the criss-cross method for linear programming and realized that by "reversing it" we could visit all the vertices of an arrangement of hyperplanes. A curiousity we thought. However, the next day we realized that by replacing the criss-cross method by Bland's rule we could generate all vertices of a polyhedron, a much more interesting problem. Reverse search was born. Since then it has found its way into many hundreds of applications and related codes. I will begin by reviewing some early history and then introduce the MTS framework that Skip Jordan and I have developed to parallelize existing reverse search (and other tree search) codes. |
12:00-14:00 | Lunch Break & Business Meeting |
Track D | |
14:00-14:30 |
Kensuke Onishi and Takeaki Uno A computation method of minimum-comparison sorting network using SeqBDD |
14:30-15:00 |
Shin-Ichi Minato Depth-First ZDD Construction with Frontier-Based Search Method for Graph Enumeration Problems |
15:00-15:30 |
Yu Nakahata, Jun Kawahara and Shin-Ichi Minato Decision-Diagram-Based Enumeration of d-Cutsets |
15:30-16:00 | Coffee Break |
16:00-19:00 | Working Session |
Track E | |
9:00-9:30 |
Ester Livshits, Leopoldo Bertossi, Benny Kimelfeld and Moshe Sebag The Shapley Value of Tuples in Query Answering |
9:30-10:00 |
Christoph Berkholz, Nofar Carmeli, Benny Kimelfeld, Nicole Schweikardt and Shai Zeevi Random Access and Random Permutation of Answers to Conjunctive Queries |
10:00-10:30 |
Antoine Amarilli, Benny Kimelfeld and Stefan Mengel Skyline Operators for Document Spanners |
10:30-11:00 |
Alessio Conte, Roberto Grossi, Giulia Punzi and Takeaki Uno Polynomial-Delay Enumeration of Maximal Common Subsequences |
11:00-11:30 | Coffee Break |
11:30-12:30 |
Invited Talk by Serge Gaspers, The University of New South Wales, Australia Probabilistic methods in input-sensitive enumeration Abstract In this talk, a new technique for subset enumeration problems is discussed. The technique was originally designed for subset optimization and decision problems, but translates seamlessly to combinatorial upper bounds and enumeration algorithms. For an instance of size n, assume enumerating all desired sets of size at most k takes time c^k poly(n), for some constant c. Then, under some mild assumptions, our technique gives an enumeration algorithm for all desired sets with total running time (2-1/c)^(n+o(n)). I will present this technique and its analysis, along with extensions and applications. This is joint work with Fedor V. Fomin, Daniel Lokshtanov, Saket Saurabh (STOC 2016 and JACM 2019), Edward J. Lee (ICALP 2017), and Ray Li (MFCS 2019). |
12:30-14:00 | Lunch Break |
14:00-19:00 | Excursion |
19:00-24:00 | Banquet |
Track F | |
9:00-9:30 |
Johann Birnick, Thomas Bläsius, Tobias Friedrich, Thorsten Papenbrock and Martin Schirneck Enumerating Unique Column Combinations with a Sample-And-(Don't)-Restart Strategy |
9:30-10:00 |
Benjamin Bergougnoux, Mamadou Kanté and Kunihiro Wasa Disjunctive Minimal Separators Enumeration |
10:00-10:30 |
Alice Raffaele and Romeo Rizzi A new decomposition for the Monotone Boolean Duality problem |
10:30-11:00 | Coffee Break |
11:00-12:00 |
Invited Talk by Koji Tsuda, Statistically Sound Data Mining Abstract Recently Financial Times published an article entitled “Big data: are we making a big mistake?". It points out that data mining methods produce too many results and it is hard to distinguish real discoveries from false ones. Actually, analyzers tend to hand-pick convincing results and present them to customers/reviewers/bosses, hiding existence of unwanted results. This is a very bad practice, because it always results in rediscovery of popular knowledge. New and real discoveries are overlooked because they do not look familiar. I will present a new technique called LAMP (Limitless Arity Multiple testing Procedure) to evaluate the reliability of data mining results in terms of statistical significance. In addition, I introduce a new line of research called selective inference. Most results are biological but underlying principles are relevant to all kinds of data analysis. |
12:00-14:00 | Lunch Break |
Track G | |
14:00-14:30 |
Alessio Conte and Takeaki Uno Proximity Search For Maximal Subgraph Enumeration |
14:30-15:00 |
Alessio Conte, Roberto Grossi, Andrea Marino and Luca Versari Listing Maximal Subgraphs Satisfying Strongly Accessible Properties |
15:00-15:30 |
Caroline Brosse, Aurélie Lagoutte, Vincent Limouzy, Arnaud Mary and Lucas Pastor Enumeration of maximal induced Π-subgraphs and minimal Π-completions |
15:30~ |
Closing |
Registration fee 0 yen.
To register online, click one of the links below that matches your preference:
Please complete only one registration form. Registration will be free this year i.e. 0 yen. Please note that for participants wanting to book a room at the Yumekaiyu Awajishima hotel through us (Option 3), the deadline has been extended and will be announced later. Please complete your registration as soon as possible as the number of rooms we are able to reserve is limited.
For participants wanting to book a room through us, please let us know which type of room you prefer: a shared room (12,000 yen per night) or a single room (16,000 yen per night). We will temporarily book the room for you. If you cannot attend, we can cancel. There are also other hotels around the conference site, so you can make your own reservations at a later date. In that case, you will only need to pay for the banquet fee if you want to attend.
The PC members will select the candidates, with consideration given to the following factors:
We will select the candidates and determine the funding provided after notification of the acceptance in late September. If you wish to book a room through us, please let us know which type of room you prefer: a shared room (12,000 yen per night) or a single room (16,000 yen per night). We will temporarily book the room for you. If you cannot attend, we can cancel.
According to the ancient Japanese literature, Kojiki and Nihon Shoki, Awaji Island is said to be the first island that formed for Japan. There are many locations that are related to the legends of how this nation was born. The beautiful nature, historic culture, abundant cuisine, and countless hotsprings are among the charms of Awaji Island that you can experience. For more information visit the Awaji Island Tourism Guide.
The conference will be held at the Yumekaiyu Awajishima hotel, located at: 1 Chome-1-50 Yamate, Sumoto, Hyogo 656-0024
For more information visit the Yumekaiyu Awajishima website.
To reach Awaji Island and the Yumekaiyu Awajishima hotel, you will need to take a bus or other road transport via Kobe city. There is no train or Shinkansen (bullet train) access to the island. We have listed some common access routes below. In most cases you will need to travel to the Sumoto Bus Center on Awaji Island where you can then take a free shuttle bus to the hotel. We have also provided an access map (pdf link here and also see below to download separate maps) if you are unfamiliar with the Osaka-Kobe area.
For more information, please visit the Awaji Island tourism access page (English) and the Yumekaiyu Awajishima hotel access page - (Japanese, requires browser translation). Also for an English language guide to buses running from Kobe to the Sumoto Bus Center, please consult this site managed by Awaji Island residents.
Timetable for pickups and drop-offs via the free hotel shuttle bus from Sumoto bus center is here. The page is in Japanese only however you can translate via Google. Note that this bus travels via other hotels.
Timetable for pickups and drop-offs via the free hotel shuttle bus from Sumoto bus center is here. The page is in Japanese only however you can translate via Google. Note that this bus travels via other hotels.
Note: If you are in the Osaka City area, you can reach Osaka Station via the JR Osaka Loop line or Osaka city subway. The subway stop is Umeda (M16) which is in the same station complex as JR Osaka (you will have to walk to the JR train line area).
Timetable for pickups and drop-offs via the free hotel shuttle bus from Sumoto bus center is here. The page is in Japanese only however you can translate via Google. Note that this bus travels via other hotels.
Takeaki Uno - PC Chair (National Institute of Informatics, Japan)
Endre Boros (Rutgers University, USA)
Mamadou Moustapha Kanté (Université Clermont Auvergne, France)
Benny Kimelfeld (Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Israel)
Masashi Kiyomi (Yokohama City University, Japan)
Andrea Marino (Università degli Studi di Firenze, Italy)
Arnaud Mary (University Claude Bernard Lyon 1, France)
Lhouari Nourine (Université Clermont Auvergne, France)
Yann Strozecki (The University of Versailles Saint-Quentin)
Katsuhisa Yamanaka (Iwate University, Japan)
Kunihiro Wasa (National Institute of Informatics, Tokyo)
Kaori Deguchi - Local Organizer
Takeaki Uno - Chair
Arnaud Mary
Kunihiro Wasa
Contributors are invited to submit an extended abstract of at most 2 pages (excluding the references) to be submitted electronically using EasyChair (click link to open electronic submission page). Invited papers and accepted contributions will be invited to contribute to a special issue in a journal.
WEPA 2019: Third Workshop on Enumeration Problems and Applications October 28-31, Yumekaiyu Awajishima, in Hyogo (Japan)
The WEPA 2019 conference is the Third Workshop on Enumeration Problems and Applications. It will take place at Yumekaiyu Awajishima, in Hyogo (Japan). The conference will take place from October 28th (Monday) to October 31st (Thursday), 2019.
Submission Deadline: September 13, 2019
Notification: September 27, 2019
Conference: October 28 - 31, 2019
WEPA is a new international forum for researchers in the area of design, analysis, experimental evaluation and engineering of algorithms for enumeration problems. The objective of the workshop is to gather researchers working in enumeration algorithms, including their applications in Biology, Data Mining, Logic, and Database. The goal is to present recent results, identify and explore directions for future research, and foster collaborations.
For this reason, along with the sessions for the presentation of established results, this year WEPA will introduce new sessions that are devoted to ideas, sketches, and open problems: hopefully this will put in touch senior researchers with junior researchers and graduate students to investigate problems of theoretical and practical interest. These new sessions will be informal, with no scheduled presentations, entirely devoted to the interactions among the participants. The workshop will be accommodated some rooms to allow space for the parallel working groups.
Submissions to WEPA should describe results in any area of enumeration problems and including, but not restricted to:
David Avis (McGill University and Kyoto University)
Serge Gaspers (The University of New South Wales, Australia)
Takashi Horiyama (Saitama University, Japan)
Koji Tsuda (Tokyo University, Japan)
Contributors are invited to submit an extended abstract of at most 2 pages (excluding the references) to be submitted electronically using EasyChair (click link to open electronic submission page). Invited papers and accepted contributions will be invited to contribute to a special issue in a journal.