- Source: AC-3 algorithm
In constraint satisfaction, the 3/info/ac" target="_blank">AC-3 algorithm (short for Arc Consistency Algorithm #3) is one of a series of algorithms used for the solution of constraint satisfaction problems (or CSP's). It was developed by Alan Mackworth in 1977. The earlier 3/info/ac" target="_blank">AC algorithms are often considered too inefficient, and many of the later ones are difficult to implement, and so 3/info/ac" target="_blank">AC-3 is the one most often taught and used in very simple constraint solvers. The 3/info/ac" target="_blank">AC-3 algorithm is not to be confused with the similarly named A3C algorithm in machine learning.
The algorithm
3/info/ac" target="_blank">AC-3 operates on constraints, variables, and the variables' domains (scopes). A variable can take any of several discrete values; the set of values for a particular variable is known as its domain. A constraint is a relation that limits or constrains the values a variable may have. The constraint may involve the values of other variables.
The current status of the CSP during the algorithm can be viewed as a directed graph, where the nodes are the variables of the problem, with edges or arcs between variables that are related by symmetric constraints, where each arc in the worklist represents a constraint that needs to be checked for consistency. 3/info/ac" target="_blank">AC-3 proceeds by examining the arcs between pairs of variables (x, y). It removes those values from the domain of x that aren't consistent with the constraints between x and y. The algorithm keeps a collection of arcs that are yet to be checked; when the domain of a variable has any values removed, all the arcs of constraints pointing to that pruned variable (except the arc of the current constraint) are added to the collection. Since the domains of the variables are finite and either one arc or at least one value are removed at each step, this algorithm is guaranteed to terminate.
For illustration, here is an example of a very simple constraint problem:
X (a variable) has the possible values {0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5}—the set of these values are the domain of X, or D(X). The variable Y has the domain D(Y) = {0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9}. Together with the constraints C1 = "X must be even" and C2 = "X + Y must equal 4" we have a CSP that 3/info/ac" target="_blank">AC-3 can solve. Notice that the actual constraint graph representing this problem must contain two edges between X and Y since C2 is undirected but the graph representation being used by 3/info/ac" target="_blank">AC-3 is directed.
3/info/ac" target="_blank">AC-3 solves the problem by first removing the non-even values from of the domain of X as required by C1, leaving D(X) = { 0, 2, 4 }. It then examines the arcs between X and Y implied by C2. Only the pairs (X=0, Y=4), (X=2, Y=2), and (X=4, Y=0) match the constraint C2. 3/info/ac" target="_blank">AC-3 then terminates, with D(X) = {0, 2, 4} and D(Y) = {0, 2, 4}.
3/info/ac" target="_blank">AC-3 is expressed in pseudocode as follows:
Input:
A set of variables X
A set of domains D(x) for each variable x in X. D(x) contains vx0, vx1... vxn, the possible values of x
A set of unary constraints R1(x) on variable x that must be satisfied
A set of binary constraints R2(x, y) on variables x and y that must be satisfied
Output:
Arc consistent domains for each variable.
function ac3(X, D, R1, R2)
// Initial domains are made consistent with unary constraints.
for each x in X
D(x) := { vx in D(x) | vx satisfies R1(x) }
// 'worklist' contains all arcs we wish to prove consistent or not.
worklist := { (x, y) | there exists a relation R2(x, y) or a relation R2(y, x) }
do
select any arc (x, y) from worklist
worklist := worklist - (x, y)
if arc-reduce (x, y)
if D(x) is empty
return failure
else
worklist := worklist + { (z, x) | z != y and there exists a relation R2(x, z) or a relation R2(z, x) }
while worklist not empty
function arc-reduce(x, y)
bool change = false
for each vx in D(x)
find a value vy in D(y) such that vx and vy satisfy the constraint R2(x, y)
if there is no such vy {
D(x) := D(x) - vx
change := true
}
return change
The algorithm has a worst-case time complexity of O(ed3) and space complexity of O(e), where e is the number of arcs and d is the size of the largest domain.
References
A.K. Mackworth. Consistency in networks of relations. Artificial Intelligence, 8:99-118, 1977.
Stuart J. Russell and Peter Norvig. Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach, 202-233, 2003.
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