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Chapter 6 - CSPs - Part - 1

Constraint satisfaction problems involve finding an assignment of values to variables that satisfies a set of constraints. A CSP is defined by a set of variables, domains of possible values for each variable, and constraints that limit allowed combinations of variable values. Backtracking search is commonly used to solve CSPs by recursively assigning values to variables and backtracking when a partial assignment violates a constraint. It involves selecting an unassigned variable, trying values from its domain, and recursively exploring consistent value assignments until a complete solution is found or all possibilities are exhausted.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
32 views

Chapter 6 - CSPs - Part - 1

Constraint satisfaction problems involve finding an assignment of values to variables that satisfies a set of constraints. A CSP is defined by a set of variables, domains of possible values for each variable, and constraints that limit allowed combinations of variable values. Backtracking search is commonly used to solve CSPs by recursively assigning values to variables and backtracking when a partial assignment violates a constraint. It involves selecting an unassigned variable, trying values from its domain, and recursively exploring consistent value assignments until a complete solution is found or all possibilities are exhausted.

Uploaded by

Osama Al Asoouli
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Constraint satisfaction problems

Part I
Constraint Satisfaction Problems
• What is a CSP?
– Finite set of variables, X1, X2, …, Xn
– Nonempty domain of possible values for each: D1, ..., Dn
– Finite set of constraints, C1...Cm
• Each constraint Ci limits the values that variables can take, e.g., X1 ≠ X2
– Each constraint Ci is a pair: Ci = (scope, relation)
• Scope = tuple of variables that participate in the constraint
• Relation = list of allowed combinations of variables
May be an explicit list of allowed combinations
May be an abstract relation allowing membership testig & listing

• CSP benefits
– Standard representation pattern
– Generic goal and successor functions
– Generic heuristics (no domain-specific expertise required)
Example: Sudoku
• Problem specification
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
A
Variables: {A1, A2, A3, … I7, I8, I9}
B
Domains: { 1, 2, 3, … , 9 }
C
Constraints:
D
each row, column “all different”
E
alldiff(A1,A2,A3…,A9), ...
F
each 3x3 block “all different”
G
alldiff(G7,G8,G9,H7,…I9), ...
H
I

Task: solve (complete a partial solution)

check “well-posed”: exactly one solution?


CSPs: What is a Solution?
• State: assignment of values to some or all variables
– Assignment is complete when every variable has an assigned value
– Assignment is partial when one or more variables have no assigned value
• Consistent assignment
– An assignment that does not violate any constraint
• A solution to a CSP is a complete and consistent assignment
– All variables are assigned, and no constraints are violated

• CSPs may require a solution that maximizes an objective


– Linear objective ) linear programming or integer linear programming
– Ex: “Weighted” CSPs

• Examples of applications
– Scheduling the time of observations on the Hubble Space Telescope
– Airline schedules
– Cryptography
– Computer vision, image interpretation
Example: Map Coloring

Variables:
Domains: { red, green, blue }
Constraints: bordering regions must have different colors:

A solution is any setting of the variables that satisfies all the constraints, e.g.,
Example: Map Coloring
• Constraint graph
– Vertices: variables
– Edges: constraints
(connect involved variables)

• Graphical model
– Abstracts the problem to a canonical form
– Can reason about problem through graph connectivity
– Ex: Tasmania can be solved independently (more later)

• Binary CSP
– Constraints involve at most two variables
– Sometimes called “pairwise”
Aside: Graph coloring
• More general problem than map coloring

• Planar graph:
graph in 2D plane with no
edge crossings

• Guthrie’s conjecture (1852)


Every planar graph can be colored · 4 colors

• Proved (using a computer) in 1977 (Appel & Haken 1977)


Varieties of CSPs
• Discrete variables
– Finite domains, size d ) O(dn) complete assignments
• Ex: Boolean CSPs: Boolean satisfiability (NP-complete)

– Inifinite domains (integers, strings, etc.)


• Ex: Job scheduling, variables are start/end days for each job
• Need a constraint language, e.g., StartJob_1 + 5 · StartJob_3
• Infinitely many solutions
• Linear constraints: solvable
• Nonlinear: no general algorithm

• Continuous variables
– Ex: Building an airline schedule or class schedule
– Linear constraints: solvable in polynomial time by LP methods
Varieties of constraints
• Unary constraints involve a single variable,
– e.g., SA ≠ green

• Binary constraints involve pairs of variables,


– e.g., SA ≠ WA

• Higher-order constraints involve 3 or more variables,


– Ex: jobs A,B,C cannot all be run at the same time
– Can always be expressed using multiple binary constraints

• Preference (soft constraints)


– Ex: “red is better than green” can often be represented by a cost for
each variable assignment
– Combines optimization with CSPs

9
Simplify…
• We restrict attention to:

• Discrete & finite domains


– Variables have a discrete, finite set of values
• No objective function
– Any complete & consistent solution is OK
• Solution
– Find a complete & consistent assignment

• Example: Sudoku puzzles


Binary CSPs
CSPs only need binary constraints!
•Unary constraints
– Just delete values from the variable’s domain

•Higher order (3 or more variables): reduce to binary


– Simple example: 3 variables X,Y,Z
– Domains Dx={1,2,3}, Dy={1,2,3}, Dz={1,2,3}
– Constraint C[X,Y,Z] = {X+Y=Z} = {(1,1,2),(1,2,3),(2,1,3)}
(Plus other variables & constraints elsewhere in the CSP)

– Create a new variable W, taking values as triples (3-tuples)


– Domain of W is Dw={(1,1,2),(1,2,3),(2,1,3)}
• Dw is exactly the tuples that satisfy the higher-order constraint
– Create three new constraints:
• C[X,W] = { [1,(1,1,2)], [1,(1,2,3)], [2,(2,1,3) }
• C[Y,W] = { [1,(1,1,2)], [2,(1,2,3)], [1,(2,1,3) }
• C[Z,W] = { [2,(1,1,2)], [3,(1,2,3)], [3,(2,1,3) }
Other constraints elsewhere involving X,Y,Z are unaffected
Example: Cryptarithmetic problems
• Find numeric substitutions that make an equation hold:

T W O Non-pairwise CSP:
+ T W O O O+O = R + 10*C1
= F O U R
R C1 C1 = {0,1}
For example:
O = 4 all-different W W+W+C1 = U + 10*C2
R = 8
W = 3 7 3 4 U C2 C2 = {0,1}
U = 6 + 7 3 4
T = 7 = 1 4 6 8 T T+T+C2 = O + 10*C3
F = 1 C3 C3 = {0,1}
F
Note: not unique – how many solutions? C3 = F
Example: Cryptarithmetic problems
• Try it yourself at home:

S E N D
+ M O R E
= M O N E Y

(a frequent request from college students to parents)


(adapted from http://www.unitime.org/csp.php)

Random binary CSPs


• A random binary CSP is defined by a four-tuple (n, d, p1, p2)
– n = the number of variables.
– d = the domain size of each variable.
– p1 = probability a constraint exists between two variables.
– p2 = probability a pair of values in the domains of two variables connected by a
constraint is incompatible.
• Note that R&N lists compatible pairs of values instead.
• Equivalent formulations; just take the set complement.

• (n, d, p1, p2) generate random binary constraints

• The so-called “model B” of Random CSP (n, d, n1, n2)


– n1 = p1 n(n-1)/2 pairs of variables are randomly and uniformly selected and binary
constraints are posted between them.
– For each constraint, n2 = p2 d^2 randomly and uniformly selected pairs of values are
picked as incompatible.

• The random CSP as an optimization problem (minCSP).


– Goal is to minimize the total sum of values for all variables.
CSP as a standard search problem
• A CSP can easily be expressed as a standard search problem.

• Incremental formulation
– Initial State: the empty assignment {}
– Actions: Assign a value to an unassigned variable provided that it does not
violate a constraint
– Goal test: the current assignment is complete
(by construction it is consistent)
– Path cost: constant cost for every step (not really relevant)
BUT: solution is at depth n (# of variables)
For BFS: branching factor at top level is nd
next level: (n-1)d

Total: n! dn leaves! But there are only dn complete assignments!

• Aside: can also use complete-state formulation


– Local search techniques (Chapter 4) tend to work well
Commutativity
• CSPs are commutative.
– Order of any given set of actions has no effect on the outcome.
– Example: choose colors for Australian territories, one at a time.
• [WA=red then NT=green] same as [NT=green then WA=red]

• All CSP search algorithms can generate successors by


considering assignments for only a single variable at each
node in the search tree
⇒ there are dn irredundant leaves

• (Figure out later to which variable to assign which value.)


Backtracking search
• Similar to depth-first search
– At each level, pick a single variable to expand
– Iterate over the domain values of that variable

• Generate children one at a time, one per value


– Backtrack when a variable has no legal values left

• Uninformed algorithm
– Poor general performance
Backtracking search
(R&N Fig. 6.5)

function BACKTRACKING-SEARCH(csp) return a solution or failure


return RECURSIVE-BACKTRACKING({} , csp)

function RECURSIVE-BACKTRACKING(assignment, csp) return a solution or failure


if assignment is complete then return assignment
var ← SELECT-UNASSIGNED-VARIABLE(VARIABLES[csp],assignment,csp)
for each value in ORDER-DOMAIN-VALUES(var, assignment, csp) do
if value is consistent with assignment according to CONSTRAINTS[csp] then
add {var=value} to assignment
result ← RECURSIVE-BACTRACKING(assignment, csp)
if result ≠ failure then return result
remove {var=value} from assignment
return failure
Backtracking search
• Expand deepest unexpanded node
• Generate only one child at a time.
• Goal-Test when inserted.
– For CSP, Goal-test at bottom
Future= green dotted circles
Frontier=white nodes
Expanded/active=gray nodes
Forgotten/reclaimed= black nodes

22
Backtracking search
• Expand deepest unexpanded node
• Generate only one child at a time.
• Goal-Test when inserted.
– For CSP, Goal-test at bottom
Future= green dotted circles
Frontier=white nodes
Expanded/active=gray nodes
Forgotten/reclaimed= black nodes

23
Backtracking search
• Expand deepest unexpanded node
• Generate only one child at a time.
• Goal-Test when inserted.
– For CSP, Goal-test at bottom
Future= green dotted circles
Frontier=white nodes
Expanded/active=gray nodes
Forgotten/reclaimed= black nodes

24
Backtracking search
• Expand deepest unexpanded node
• Generate only one child at a time.
• Goal-Test when inserted.
– For CSP, Goal-test at bottom
Future= green dotted circles
Frontier=white nodes
Expanded/active=gray nodes
Forgotten/reclaimed= black nodes

25
Backtracking search
• Expand deepest unexpanded node
• Generate only one child at a time.
• Goal-Test when inserted.
– For CSP, Goal-test at bottom
Future= green dotted circles
Frontier=white nodes
Expanded/active=gray nodes
Forgotten/reclaimed= black nodes

26
Backtracking search
• Expand deepest unexpanded node
• Generate only one child at a time.
• Goal-Test when inserted.
– For CSP, Goal-test at bottom
Future= green dotted circles
Frontier=white nodes
Expanded/active=gray nodes
Forgotten/reclaimed= black nodes

27
Backtracking search
• Expand deepest unexpanded node
• Generate only one child at a time.
• Goal-Test when inserted.
– For CSP, Goal-test at bottom
Future= green dotted circles
Frontier=white nodes
Expanded/active=gray nodes
Forgotten/reclaimed= black nodes

28
Backtracking search
• Expand deepest unexpanded node
• Generate only one child at a time.
• Goal-Test when inserted.
– For CSP, Goal-test at bottom
Future= green dotted circles
Frontier=white nodes
Expanded/active=gray nodes
Forgotten/reclaimed= black nodes

29
Backtracking search
• Expand deepest unexpanded node
• Generate only one child at a time.
• Goal-Test when inserted.
– For CSP, Goal-test at bottom
Future= green dotted circles
Frontier=white nodes
Expanded/active=gray nodes
Forgotten/reclaimed= black nodes

30
Backtracking search
• Expand deepest unexpanded node
• Generate only one child at a time.
• Goal-Test when inserted.
– For CSP, Goal-test at bottom
Future= green dotted circles
Frontier=white nodes
Expanded/active=gray nodes
Forgotten/reclaimed= black nodes

31
Backtracking search
• Expand deepest unexpanded node
• Generate only one child at a time.
• Goal-Test when inserted.
– For CSP, Goal-test at bottom
Future= green dotted circles
Frontier=white nodes
Expanded/active=gray nodes
Forgotten/reclaimed= black nodes

32
Backtracking search
• Expand deepest unexpanded node
• Generate only one child at a time.
• Goal-Test when inserted.
– For CSP, Goal-test at bottom
Future= green dotted circles
Frontier=white nodes
Expanded/active=gray nodes
Forgotten/reclaimed= black nodes

33
Backtracking search
(R&N Fig. 6.5)

function BACKTRACKING-SEARCH(csp) return a solution or failure


return RECURSIVE-BACKTRACKING({} , csp)

function RECURSIVE-BACKTRACKING(assignment, csp) return a solution or failure


if assignment is complete then return assignment
var ← SELECT-UNASSIGNED-VARIABLE(VARIABLES[csp],assignment,csp)
for each value in ORDER-DOMAIN-VALUES(var, assignment, csp) do
if value is consistent with assignment according to CONSTRAINTS[csp] then
add {var=value} to assignment
result ← RECURSIVE-BACTRACKING(assignment, csp)
if result ≠ failure then return result
remove {var=value} from assignment
return failure
Improving Backtracking O(exp(n))
• Make our search more “informed” (e.g. heuristics)
– General purpose methods can give large speed gains
– CSPs are a generic formulation; hence heuristics are more “generic” as well

• Before search:
– Reduce the search space
– Arc-consistency, path-consistency, i-consistency
– Variable ordering (fixed)

• During search:
– Look-ahead schemes:
• Detecting failure early; reduce the search space if possible
• Which variable should be assigned next?
• Which value should we explore first?
– Look-back schemes:
• Backjumping
• Constraint recording
• Dependency-directed backtracking
Look-ahead: Variable and value orderings
• Intuition:
– Apply propagation at each node in the search tree (reduce future branching)
– Choose a variable that will detect failures early (low branching factor)
– Choose value least likely to yield a dead-end (find solution early if possible)

• Forward-checking
– (check each unassigned variable separately)
• Maintaining arc-consistency (MAC)
– (apply full arc-consistency)

36
Dependence on variable ordering
• Example: coloring

Color WA, Q, V first: Color WA, SA, NT first:


9 ways to color 6 ways to color
none inconsistent (yet) all lead to solutions
only 3 lead to solutions… no backtracking
Dependence on variable ordering
• Another graph coloring example:
Minimum remaining values (MRV)
• A heuristic for selecting the next variable
– a.k.a. most constrained variable (MCV) heuristic

– choose the variable with the fewest legal values

– will immediately detect failure if X has no legal values

– (Related to forward checking, later)

39
Degree heuristic
• Another heuristic for selecting the next variable
– a.k.a. most constraining variable heuristic

– Select variable involved in the most constraints on other


unassigned variables

– Useful as a tie-breaker among most constrained variables

What about the order to try values?


40
Least Constraining Value
• Heuristic for selecting what value to try next
• Given a variable, choose the least constraining value:
– the one that rules out the fewest values in the remaining
variables

– Makes it more likely to find a solution early

41
Variable and value orderings
• Minimum remaining values for variable ordering
• Least constraining value for value ordering
– Why do we want these? Is there a contradiction?

• Intuition:
– Choose a variable that will detect failures early (low branching factor)
– Choose value least likely to yield a dead-end (find solution early if possible)

• MRV for variable selection reduces current branching factor


– Low branching factor throughout tree = fast search
– Hopefully, when we get to variables with currently many values, forward checking
or arc consistency will have reduced their domains & they’ll have low branching too
• LCV for value selection increases the chance of success
– If we’re going to fail at this node, we’ll have to examine every value anyway
– If we’re going to succeed, the earlier we do, the sooner we can stop searching

42
Summary
• CSPs
– special kind of problem: states defined by values of a fixed set of variables,
goal test defined by constraints on variable values

• Backtracking = depth-first search with one variable assigned per node

• Heuristics
– Variable ordering and value selection heuristics help significantly

• Variable ordering (selection) heuristics


– Choose variable with Minimum Remaining Values (MRV)
– Degree Heuristic – break ties after applying MRV

• Value ordering (selection) heuristic


– Choose Least Constraining Value

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