NeuroGIFT: Using a Machine Learning Based Sat Solver for Cryptanalysis

Author(s):  
Ling Sun ◽  
David Gerault ◽  
Adrien Benamira ◽  
Thomas Peyrin
Keyword(s):  
10.29007/b8t1 ◽  
2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Enrique Alfonso ◽  
Norbert Manthey

In this paper we first present three new features for classifying CNF formulas. These features are based on the structural information of the formula and consider AND-gates as well as exactly-one constraints. Next, we use these features to construct a machine learning approach to select a SAT solver configuration for CNF formulas with random decision forests. Based on this classification task we can show that our new features are useful compared to existing features. Since the computation time for these features is small, the constructed classifier improves the performance of the SAT solvers on application and hand crafted benchmarks. On the other hand, the comparison shows that the set of new features also results in a better classification.


Author(s):  
Yacine Izza ◽  
Joao Marques-Silva

Random Forest (RFs) are among the most widely used Machine Learning (ML) classifiers. Even though RFs are not interpretable, there are no dedicated non-heuristic approaches for computing explanations of RFs. Moreover, there is recent work on polynomial algorithms for explaining ML models, including naive Bayes classifiers. Hence, one question is whether finding explanations of RFs can be solved in polynomial time. This paper answers this question negatively, by proving that computing one PI-explanation of an RF is D^P-hard. Furthermore, the paper proposes a propositional encoding for computing explanations of RFs, thus enabling finding PI-explanations with a SAT solver. This contrasts with earlier work on explaining boosted trees (BTs) and neural networks (NNs), which requires encodings based on SMT/MILP. Experimental results, obtained on a wide range of publicly available datasets, demonstrate that the proposed SAT-based approach scales to RFs of sizes common in practical applications. Perhaps more importantly, the experimental results demonstrate that, for the vast majority of examples considered, the SAT-based approach proposed in this paper significantly outperforms existing heuristic approaches.


2020 ◽  
Vol 43 ◽  
Author(s):  
Myrthe Faber

Abstract Gilead et al. state that abstraction supports mental travel, and that mental travel critically relies on abstraction. I propose an important addition to this theoretical framework, namely that mental travel might also support abstraction. Specifically, I argue that spontaneous mental travel (mind wandering), much like data augmentation in machine learning, provides variability in mental content and context necessary for abstraction.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammed J. Zaki ◽  
Wagner Meira, Jr
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc Peter Deisenroth ◽  
A. Aldo Faisal ◽  
Cheng Soon Ong
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Lorenza Saitta ◽  
Attilio Giordana ◽  
Antoine Cornuejols

Author(s):  
Shai Shalev-Shwartz ◽  
Shai Ben-David
Keyword(s):  

2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher Schreiner ◽  
Kari Torkkola ◽  
Mike Gardner ◽  
Keshu Zhang

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