82 research outputs found
Computing downward closures for stacked counter automata
The downward closure of a language of words is the set of all (not
necessarily contiguous) subwords of members of . It is well known that the
downward closure of any language is regular. Although the downward closure
seems to be a promising abstraction, there are only few language classes for
which an automaton for the downward closure is known to be computable.
It is shown here that for stacked counter automata, the downward closure is
computable. Stacked counter automata are finite automata with a storage
mechanism obtained by \emph{adding blind counters} and \emph{building stacks}.
Hence, they generalize pushdown and blind counter automata.
The class of languages accepted by these automata are precisely those in the
hierarchy obtained from the context-free languages by alternating two closure
operators: imposing semilinear constraints and taking the algebraic extension.
The main tool for computing downward closures is the new concept of Parikh
annotations. As a second application of Parikh annotations, it is shown that
the hierarchy above is strict at every level.Comment: 34 pages, 1 figure; submitte
Commutative Languages and their Composition by Consensual Methods
Commutative languages with the semilinear property (SLIP) can be naturally
recognized by real-time NLOG-SPACE multi-counter machines. We show that unions
and concatenations of such languages can be similarly recognized, relying on --
and further developing, our recent results on the family of consensually
regular (CREG) languages. A CREG language is defined by a regular language on
the alphabet that includes the terminal alphabet and its marked copy. New
conditions, for ensuring that the union or concatenation of CREG languages is
closed, are presented and applied to the commutative SLIP languages. The paper
contributes to the knowledge of the CREG family, and introduces novel
techniques for language composition, based on arithmetic congruences that act
as language signatures. Open problems are listed.Comment: In Proceedings AFL 2014, arXiv:1405.527
The Equivalence Problem for Deterministic MSO Tree Transducers is Decidable
It is decidable for deterministic MSO definable graph-to-string or
graph-to-tree transducers whether they are equivalent on a context-free set of
graphs
Tree transducers, L systems, and two-way machines
A relationship between parallel rewriting systems and two-way machines is investigated. Restrictions on the “copying power” of these devices endow them with rich structuring and give insight into the issues of determinism, parallelism, and copying. Among the parallel rewriting systems considered are the top-down tree transducer; the generalized syntax-directed translation scheme and the ETOL system, and among the two-way machines are the tree-walking automaton, the two-way finite-state transducer, and (generalizations of) the one-way checking stack automaton. The. relationship of these devices to macro grammars is also considered. An effort is made .to provide a systematic survey of a number of existing results
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