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SAT 2004

On Computing Minimum Unsatisfiable Cores

Conference Paper Poster Overview Session I Logic in Computer Science · Satisfiability

Abstract

Certifying a SAT solver for unsatisfiable instances is a computationally hard problem. Nevertheless, in the utilization of SAT in industrial settings, one often needs to be able to generate unsatisfiability proofs, either to guarantee the correctness of the SAT solver or as part of the utilization of SAT in some applications (e.g. in model checking). As part of the process of generating unsatisfiable proofs, one is also interested in unsatisfiable subformulas of the original formula, also known as unsatisfiable cores. Furthermore, it may by useful identifying the minimum unsatisfiable core of a given problem instance, i.e. the smallest number of clauses that make the instance unsatisfiable. This approach is be very useful in AI problems where identifying the minimum core is crucial for correcting the minimum amount of inconsistent information (e.g. in knowledge bases).

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Context

Venue
International Conference on Theory and Applications of Satisfiability Testing
Archive span
2003-2025
Indexed papers
824
Paper id
1100380051207234740