4,598 research outputs found
Ordered Navigation on Multi-attributed Data Words
We study temporal logics and automata on multi-attributed data words.
Recently, BD-LTL was introduced as a temporal logic on data words extending LTL
by navigation along positions of single data values. As allowing for navigation
wrt. tuples of data values renders the logic undecidable, we introduce ND-LTL,
an extension of BD-LTL by a restricted form of tuple-navigation. While complete
ND-LTL is still undecidable, the two natural fragments allowing for either
future or past navigation along data values are shown to be Ackermann-hard, yet
decidability is obtained by reduction to nested multi-counter systems. To this
end, we introduce and study nested variants of data automata as an intermediate
model simplifying the constructions. To complement these results we show that
imposing the same restrictions on BD-LTL yields two 2ExpSpace-complete
fragments while satisfiability for the full logic is known to be as hard as
reachability in Petri nets
On Spatial Conjunction as Second-Order Logic
Spatial conjunction is a powerful construct for reasoning about dynamically
allocated data structures, as well as concurrent, distributed and mobile
computation. While researchers have identified many uses of spatial
conjunction, its precise expressive power compared to traditional logical
constructs was not previously known. In this paper we establish the expressive
power of spatial conjunction. We construct an embedding from first-order logic
with spatial conjunction into second-order logic, and more surprisingly, an
embedding from full second order logic into first-order logic with spatial
conjunction. These embeddings show that the satisfiability of formulas in
first-order logic with spatial conjunction is equivalent to the satisfiability
of formulas in second-order logic. These results explain the great expressive
power of spatial conjunction and can be used to show that adding unrestricted
spatial conjunction to a decidable logic leads to an undecidable logic. As one
example, we show that adding unrestricted spatial conjunction to two-variable
logic leads to undecidability. On the side of decidability, the embedding into
second-order logic immediately implies the decidability of first-order logic
with a form of spatial conjunction over trees. The embedding into spatial
conjunction also has useful consequences: because a restricted form of spatial
conjunction in two-variable logic preserves decidability, we obtain that a
correspondingly restricted form of second-order quantification in two-variable
logic is decidable. The resulting language generalizes the first-order theory
of boolean algebra over sets and is useful in reasoning about the contents of
data structures in object-oriented languages.Comment: 16 page
On Relaxing Metric Information in Linear Temporal Logic
Metric LTL formulas rely on the next operator to encode time distances,
whereas qualitative LTL formulas use only the until operator. This paper shows
how to transform any metric LTL formula M into a qualitative formula Q, such
that Q is satisfiable if and only if M is satisfiable over words with
variability bounded with respect to the largest distances used in M (i.e.,
occurrences of next), but the size of Q is independent of such distances.
Besides the theoretical interest, this result can help simplify the
verification of systems with time-granularity heterogeneity, where large
distances are required to express the coarse-grain dynamics in terms of
fine-grain time units.Comment: Minor change
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