The bionic DBMS is coming, but what will it look like?
Ryan Johnson, Ippokratis Pandis
CIDR 2013
This paper deals with a technique for proving that certain problems of numerical analysis are numerically unsolvable. So that only methods which are natural for dealing with analytic problems may be presented, notions from recursive function theory have been avoided. Instead, the number of necessary function evaluations is taken as the measure of computational complexity. The role of topological concepts in the study of computability is examined. Last, a topological result is used to prove that a simple initial-value problem is numerically unsolvable. © 1973, ACM. All rights reserved.
Ryan Johnson, Ippokratis Pandis
CIDR 2013
Arnon Amir, Michael Lindenbaum
IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence
Elron Bandel, Yotam Perlitz, et al.
NAACL 2024
Chen-Yong Cher, Michael Gschwind
VEE 2008