1,704 research outputs found

    The Complexity of Orbits of Computably Enumerable Sets

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    The goal of this paper is to announce there is a single orbit of the c.e. sets with inclusion, \E, such that the question of membership in this orbit is Σ11\Sigma^1_1-complete. This result and proof have a number of nice corollaries: the Scott rank of \E is \wock +1; not all orbits are elementarily definable; there is no arithmetic description of all orbits of \E; for all finite α≥9\alpha \geq 9, there is a properly Δα0\Delta^0_\alpha orbit (from the proof). A few small corrections made in this versionComment: To appear in the Bulletion of Symbolic Logi

    Expressive Completeness of Existential Rule Languages for Ontology-based Query Answering

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    Existential rules, also known as data dependencies in Databases, have been recently rediscovered as a promising family of languages for Ontology-based Query Answering. In this paper, we prove that disjunctive embedded dependencies exactly capture the class of recursively enumerable ontologies in Ontology-based Conjunctive Query Answering (OCQA). Our expressive completeness result does not rely on any built-in linear order on the database. To establish the expressive completeness, we introduce a novel semantic definition for OCQA ontologies. We also show that neither the class of disjunctive tuple-generating dependencies nor the class of embedded dependencies is expressively complete for recursively enumerable OCQA ontologies.Comment: 10 pages; the full version of a paper to appear in IJCAI 2016. Changes (regarding to v1): a new reference has been added, and some typos have been correcte

    The omega-inequality problem for concatenation hierarchies of star-free languages

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    The problem considered in this paper is whether an inequality of omega-terms is valid in a given level of a concatenation hierarchy of star-free languages. The main result shows that this problem is decidable for all (integer and half) levels of the Straubing-Th\'erien hierarchy

    The Small-Is-Very-Small Principle

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    The central result of this paper is the small-is-very-small principle for restricted sequential theories. The principle says roughly that whenever the given theory shows that a property has a small witness, i.e. a witness in every definable cut, then it shows that the property has a very small witness: i.e. a witness below a given standard number. We draw various consequences from the central result. For example (in rough formulations): (i) Every restricted, recursively enumerable sequential theory has a finitely axiomatized extension that is conservative w.r.t. formulas of complexity ≤n\leq n. (ii) Every sequential model has, for any nn, an extension that is elementary for formulas of complexity ≤n\leq n, in which the intersection of all definable cuts is the natural numbers. (iii) We have reflection for Σ20\Sigma^0_2-sentences with sufficiently small witness in any consistent restricted theory UU. (iv) Suppose UU is recursively enumerable and sequential. Suppose further that every recursively enumerable and sequential VV that locally inteprets UU, globally interprets UU. Then, UU is mutually globally interpretable with a finitely axiomatized sequential theory. The paper contains some careful groundwork developing partial satisfaction predicates in sequential theories for the complexity measure depth of quantifier alternations
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