Chapter 5 Outline Formal definition of CSP CSP

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Chapter 5 Outline • Formal definition of CSP • CSP Examples • Backtracking search

Chapter 5 Outline • Formal definition of CSP • CSP Examples • Backtracking search for CSPs • Problem structure and problem decomposition • Local search for CSPs

Constraint Satisfaction Problems • World state: well defined set of variables Vi with domain

Constraint Satisfaction Problems • World state: well defined set of variables Vi with domain Di • Goal test: satisfy a set of constraints that specify allowable combinations of values for subsets of variables • Depth first search appropriate – path doesn’t matter, only goal state, maximum depth fixed at n, the number of variables, select 1 variable to branch on at each level of the tree • Backtracking: once a constraint is violated there is no point looking further • Forward checking: reduce branching factor by “shrinking” domains of un-set variables to reflect constraints imposed by already set variables. Backtrack if any un-set variables domain is empty

Formal Definition: CSP • Constraint Satisfaction Problem (CSP) – Set of Variables: X 1,

Formal Definition: CSP • Constraint Satisfaction Problem (CSP) – Set of Variables: X 1, X 2, X 3, … Xn – Each Xi has a non-empty domain Di of possible values, v i. – Set of Constraints: C 1, C 2, … Cn – Each Ci has a subset of variables specifying the combination of vi’s.

Constraint Satisfaction Problems – A problem state or assignment is represented by: • {Xi

Constraint Satisfaction Problems – A problem state or assignment is represented by: • {Xi = vi, Xj = vi, . . . } – An assignment is consistent if no constraints are violated. – Constraint Graph • Nodes represent variables • Arcs represent constraints

Simple CSPs • CSPs with discrete variables and finite domains. – Map-coloring (graph coloring)

Simple CSPs • CSPs with discrete variables and finite domains. – Map-coloring (graph coloring) – SAT (3 SAT) (NP-Complete) – N-Queens

Question Any CSP can be reformulated into the standard notation (Set of Variables: X

Question Any CSP can be reformulated into the standard notation (Set of Variables: X 1, X 2, X 3, … Xn, Set of Constraints: C 1, C 2, … Cn, Bla bla) Why would we do that?

CSP Example • Graph coloring is a good example of a CSP. – Graphs

CSP Example • Graph coloring is a good example of a CSP. – Graphs are also good for representing constraints! – Assume we can use the colors {red, blue, yellow} – Can we color the graph such that a each adjacent node has a different color? Let’s choose blue for X 1? X 1 X 2 What color can we choose for X 2? X 3 Now what can we choose for X 3? Does it matter what color we choose for X 4? X 4 What if we connect X 5 to X 2? X 5 What about X 5?

CSP Example • What happens if we only have two colors {red, blue}? Does

CSP Example • What happens if we only have two colors {red, blue}? Does adding the link between X 2 and X 5 change the problem? X 1 X 2 X 3 X 4 X 5

Types of Constraints • Unary Constraint – Constrains the value of a single variable.

Types of Constraints • Unary Constraint – Constrains the value of a single variable. • Binary Constraint – Relates two variables. • N-ary Constraint – Relates multiple variables. • Preference Constraint – Indicate preferred solutions.

More complex CSPs • Discrete variables with infinite domains. – For example, a set

More complex CSPs • Discrete variables with infinite domains. – For example, a set of integers. – Characteristic of such problems • Cannot enumerate all variable combinations. – Requires a constraint language. • Continuous Domains – Example, linear progamming.

CSP Search Approach: Backtracking • A depth-first search that chooses values for one variable

CSP Search Approach: Backtracking • A depth-first search that chooses values for one variable at a time and backtracks when a variable has no legal values left to assign is a backtracking search.

Questions to address 1. Which variable should we choose for assignment? 2. What order

Questions to address 1. Which variable should we choose for assignment? 2. What order should we assign values? 3. What are the implications of the current variable assignments on the other unassigned variables? 4. When a path fails, how do we avoid repeating the failure on subsequent paths?

Which variable to assign? • Which variable to assign? – Standard backtracking uses some

Which variable to assign? • Which variable to assign? – Standard backtracking uses some arbitrary/fixed ordering and simply assigns the next available variable. • It is rare that this is efficient. – Is there a way to chose the variable with the fewest “legal” values?

Which variable to assign? • Minimum remaining values (MRV) – Simply select the variable

Which variable to assign? • Minimum remaining values (MRV) – Simply select the variable with the fewest “legal” values. – If a variable has no legal values, then MRV selects the variable and the failure is immediately detected. – Can be implemented by changing the selection criteria of backtracking search.

Which variable to assign? • MRV is useful if you have already started the

Which variable to assign? • MRV is useful if you have already started the search. • But how is the first variable chosen? – Degree Heuristic • Choose the variable involved with the largest number of constraints with other unassigned variables. • Can also be used as a tie-breaker in all other situations.

Which variable to assign? • Degree Heuristic X 1 Which Variable has the largest

Which variable to assign? • Degree Heuristic X 1 Which Variable has the largest number of constraints? X 2 X 3 X 4 X 5

Choosing a value to assign • Chose the value that rules out the fewest

Choosing a value to assign • Chose the value that rules out the fewest choices for the neighboring variables in the constraint graph. (Least-Constraining-Value) – Attempts to provide maximum flexibility for remaining variable assignments

What are the implications of an assignment? • Can we reduce the search space

What are the implications of an assignment? • Can we reduce the search space by looking at constraints earlier in the search process? • Forward Checking • Constraint Propagation

Forward Checking • When variable X is assigned, check each unassigned variable Y connected

Forward Checking • When variable X is assigned, check each unassigned variable Y connected to X by a constraint. • Delete from Y’s domain any value that is inconsistent with the value assigned to X.

Constraint Propagation • Propagate the implications of a constraint on one variable onto other

Constraint Propagation • Propagate the implications of a constraint on one variable onto other variables. – Must be able to do this quickly. – Why?

Arc Consistency • Requires a directed arc in the consistency graph. • Provides early

Arc Consistency • Requires a directed arc in the consistency graph. • Provides early detection of inconsistencies. – Must be applied repeatedly to detect ALL constraints.

K-Consistency • A CSP is k-consistent if for any set of k – 1

K-Consistency • A CSP is k-consistent if for any set of k – 1 variables and for any constraint assignment to those variables, a consistent value can always be assigned to any kth value.

K-Consistency – Node Consistency (1 -Consistency) • Each individual variable is consistent. – 2

K-Consistency – Node Consistency (1 -Consistency) • Each individual variable is consistent. – 2 -Consistency = arc consistency – Path Consistency (3 -Consistency) • Any pair of adjacent variables can always be extended to a third neighboring variable. – Stronger consistency checks require more processing time but reduce the branching factor and detection of inconsistencies.

Special Constraints • All. Diff – All variables must have distinct values. – To

Special Constraints • All. Diff – All variables must have distinct values. – To satisfy this constraint for m variables and n values, n >= m. Why? • Resource (atmost) constraint – Define an atmost constraint value and then add the minimum values of the current domains. – The sum must be less than or equal to the constraint value.

How is repeating failures avoided? • Chronological backtracking – Backs up to the most

How is repeating failures avoided? • Chronological backtracking – Backs up to the most recent decision point and tries a different value for it.

Chronological Backtracking X 1 X 2 X 3 X 5 Simple backtracking takes us

Chronological Backtracking X 1 X 2 X 3 X 5 Simple backtracking takes us to X 5. What happens? X 4 • Back up to the conflict set – The variables that caused the problem. – Typically the set for X is the set of previously assigned variables connected to X by constraints.

Backjumping • Backtracks to the most recent variable in the conflict set. – Every

Backjumping • Backtracks to the most recent variable in the conflict set. – Every branch pruned by backjumping is also pruned by forward checking.

Conflict-directed backjumping • Modify backjumping to use conflict sets that include not only the

Conflict-directed backjumping • Modify backjumping to use conflict sets that include not only the variables with a direct conflict but also any subsequent variables with no consistent solution. – Look backwards and expand the conflict set.

Conflict-Directed Backjumping – Let Xj be the current variable, and let conf(Xj) be its

Conflict-Directed Backjumping – Let Xj be the current variable, and let conf(Xj) be its conflict set. If every possible value for Xj fails, backjump to the most recent variable Xi in conf (Xj), and set conf (Xi) conf(Xj) – {Xi}. • Does this stop us from making the same mistake in another branch of the same tree?

Local Search • Section 4. 3 discussed local search algorithms. – Can be quite

Local Search • Section 4. 3 discussed local search algorithms. – Can be quite effective for CSP. • Fairly efficient • Can be used on-line when a problem changes.