14,869 research outputs found
Binary Reachability of Timed Pushdown Automata via Quantifier Elimination and Cyclic Order Atoms
We study an expressive model of timed pushdown automata extended with modular and fractional clock constraints. We show that the binary reachability relation is effectively expressible in hybrid linear arithmetic with a rational and an integer sort. This subsumes analogous expressibility results previously known for finite and pushdown timed automata with untimed stack. As key technical tools, we use quantifier elimination for a fragment of hybrid linear arithmetic and for cyclic order atoms, and a reduction to register pushdown automata over cyclic order atoms
A Survey on Continuous Time Computations
We provide an overview of theories of continuous time computation. These
theories allow us to understand both the hardness of questions related to
continuous time dynamical systems and the computational power of continuous
time analog models. We survey the existing models, summarizing results, and
point to relevant references in the literature
Hybrid Branching-Time Logics
Hybrid branching-time logics are introduced as extensions of CTL-like logics
with state variables and the downarrow-binder. Following recent work in the
linear framework, only logics with a single variable are considered. The
expressive power and the complexity of satisfiability of the resulting logics
is investigated.
As main result, the satisfiability problem for the hybrid versions of several
branching-time logics is proved to be 2EXPTIME-complete. These branching-time
logics range from strict fragments of CTL to extensions of CTL that can talk
about the past and express fairness-properties. The complexity gap relative to
CTL is explained by a corresponding succinctness result.
To prove the upper bound, the automata-theoretic approach to branching-time
logics is extended to hybrid logics, showing that non-emptiness of alternating
one-pebble Buchi tree automata is 2EXPTIME-complete.Comment: An extended abstract of this paper was presented at the International
Workshop on Hybrid Logics (HyLo 2007
Improving HyLTL model checking of hybrid systems
The problem of model-checking hybrid systems is a long-time challenge in the
scientific community. Most of the existing approaches and tools are either
limited on the properties that they can verify, or restricted to simplified
classes of systems. To overcome those limitations, a temporal logic called
HyLTL has been recently proposed. The model checking problem for this logic has
been solved by translating the formula into an equivalent hybrid automaton,
that can be analized using existing tools. The original construction employs a
declarative procedure that generates exponentially many states upfront, and can
be very inefficient when complex formulas are involved. In this paper we solve
a technical issue in the construction that was not considered in previous
works, and propose a new algorithm to translate HyLTL into hybrid automata,
that exploits optimized techniques coming from the discrete LTL community to
build smaller automata.Comment: In Proceedings GandALF 2013, arXiv:1307.416
Towards Cancer Hybrid Automata
This paper introduces Cancer Hybrid Automata (CHAs), a formalism to model the
progression of cancers through discrete phenotypes. The classification of
cancer progression using discrete states like stages and hallmarks has become
common in the biology literature, but primarily as an organizing principle, and
not as an executable formalism. The precise computational model developed here
aims to exploit this untapped potential, namely, through automatic verification
of progression models (e.g., consistency, causal connections, etc.),
classification of unreachable or unstable states and computer-generated
(individualized or universal) therapy plans. The paper builds on a
phenomenological approach, and as such does not need to assume a model for the
biochemistry of the underlying natural progression. Rather, it abstractly
models transition timings between states as well as the effects of drugs and
clinical tests, and thus allows formalization of temporal statements about the
progression as well as notions of timed therapies. The model proposed here is
ultimately based on hybrid automata, and we show how existing controller
synthesis algorithms can be generalized to CHA models, so that therapies can be
generated automatically. Throughout this paper we use cancer hallmarks to
represent the discrete states through which cancer progresses, but other
notions of discretely or continuously varying state formalisms could also be
used to derive similar therapies.Comment: In Proceedings HSB 2012, arXiv:1208.315
Non-blocking supervisory control for initialised rectangular automata
We consider the problem of supervisory control for a class of rectangular automata and more specifically for compact rectangular automata with uniform rectangular activity, i.e. initialised. The supervisory controller is state feedback and disables discrete-event transitions in order to solve the non-blocking forbidden state problem. The non-blocking problem is defined under both strong and weak conditions. For the latter maximally permissive solutions that are computable on a finite quotient space characterised by language equivalence are derived
Statistical Model Checking for Stochastic Hybrid Systems
This paper presents novel extensions and applications of the UPPAAL-SMC model
checker. The extensions allow for statistical model checking of stochastic
hybrid systems. We show how our race-based stochastic semantics extends to
networks of hybrid systems, and indicate the integration technique applied for
implementing this semantics in the UPPAAL-SMC simulation engine. We report on
two applications of the resulting tool-set coming from systems biology and
energy aware buildings.Comment: In Proceedings HSB 2012, arXiv:1208.315
Higher-Dimensional Timed Automata
We introduce a new formalism of higher-dimensional timed automata, based on
van Glabbeek's higher-dimensional automata and Alur's timed automata. We prove
that their reachability is PSPACE-complete and can be decided using zone-based
algorithms. We also show how to use tensor products to combat state-space
explosion and how to extend the setting to higher-dimensional hybrid automata
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