833 research outputs found
On space-bounded synchronized alternating Turing machines
AbstractWe continue the study of the computational power of synchronized alternating Turing machines (SATM) introduced in (HromkoviÄ 1986, SlobodovĂĄ 1987, 1988a, b) to allow communication via synchronization among processes of alternating Turing machines. We are interested in comparing the four main classes of space-bounded synchronized alternating Turing machines obtained by adding or removing off-line capability and nondeterminism (1SUTM(S(n)), SUTM(S(n)), 1SATM(S(n)), and SATM(S(n)) against one another and against other variants of alternating Turing machines. Denoting the class of languages accepted by machines in C by L(C), we show as our main results that L(1SUTM(S(n))) â L(SUTM(S(n))) â L(1SATM(S(n)))= L(SATM(S(n))) for all space-bounded functions S(n)Ï”o(n), and L(1SUTM(S(n)))= L(SUTM(S(n))) â L(1SATM(S(n)))=L(SATM(S(n))) for S(n)) â©Ÿ n. Furthermore, we show that for log log(n) â©œ S(n)Ï”o(log(n)), L(1SUTM(S(n))) is incomparable to L[1] ATM(S(n))). L(UTM(S(n))), L(1MUTM(S(n))), and L(MUTM(S(n))), where MATMs are alternating Turing machines with modified acceptance proposed in (Inoue 1989); in contrast, we show that these relationships become proper inclusions when log(n) â©œ S(n)Ï”o(n).For deterministic synchronized alternating finite automata with at most k processes (1DSA(k)FA and DSA(k)FA) we establish a tight hierarchy on the number of processes for the one-way case, namely, L(1DSA(n)FA) â L(1DSA(n+1)FA) for all n > 0, and show that L(1DFA(2)) â âȘk=1âL(DSA(k)FA) â â
, where DFA(k) denotes deterministic k-head finite automata. Finally we investigate closure properties under Boolean operations for some of these classes of languages
Forward Analysis and Model Checking for Trace Bounded WSTS
We investigate a subclass of well-structured transition systems (WSTS), the
bounded---in the sense of Ginsburg and Spanier (Trans. AMS 1964)---complete
deterministic ones, which we claim provide an adequate basis for the study of
forward analyses as developed by Finkel and Goubault-Larrecq (Logic. Meth.
Comput. Sci. 2012). Indeed, we prove that, unlike other conditions considered
previously for the termination of forward analysis, boundedness is decidable.
Boundedness turns out to be a valuable restriction for WSTS verification, as we
show that it further allows to decide all -regular properties on the
set of infinite traces of the system
Synchronizing Data Words for Register Automata
Register automata (RAs) are finite automata extended with a finite set of
registers to store and compare data from an infinite domain. We study the
concept of synchronizing data words in RAs: does there exist a data word that
sends all states of the RA to a single state?
For deterministic RAs with k registers (k-DRAs), we prove that inputting data
words with 2k+1 distinct data from the infinite data domain is sufficient to
synchronize. We show that the synchronization problem for DRAs is in general
PSPACE-complete, and it is NLOGSPACE-complete for 1-DRAs. For nondeterministic
RAs (NRAs), we show that Ackermann(n) distinct data (where n is the size of the
RA) might be necessary to synchronize. The synchronization problem for NRAs is
in general undecidable, however, we establish Ackermann-completeness of the
problem for 1-NRAs.
Another main result is the NEXPTIME-completeness of the length-bounded
synchronization problem for NRAs, where a bound on the length of the
synchronizing data word, written in binary, is given. A variant of this last
construction allows to prove that the length-bounded universality problem for
NRAs is co-NEXPTIME-complete
Alternating, private alternating, and quantum alternating realtime automata
We present new results on realtime alternating, private alternating, and
quantum alternating automaton models. Firstly, we show that the emptiness
problem for alternating one-counter automata on unary alphabets is undecidable.
Then, we present two equivalent definitions of realtime private alternating
finite automata (PAFAs). We show that the emptiness problem is undecidable for
PAFAs. Furthermore, PAFAs can recognize some nonregular unary languages,
including the unary squares language, which seems to be difficult even for some
classical counter automata with two-way input. Regarding quantum finite
automata (QFAs), we show that the emptiness problem is undecidable both for
universal QFAs on general alphabets, and for alternating QFAs with two
alternations on unary alphabets. On the other hand, the same problem is
decidable for nondeterministic QFAs on general alphabets. We also show that the
unary squares language is recognized by alternating QFAs with two alternations
Multi-Head Finite Automata: Characterizations, Concepts and Open Problems
Multi-head finite automata were introduced in (Rabin, 1964) and (Rosenberg,
1966). Since that time, a vast literature on computational and descriptional
complexity issues on multi-head finite automata documenting the importance of
these devices has been developed. Although multi-head finite automata are a
simple concept, their computational behavior can be already very complex and
leads to undecidable or even non-semi-decidable problems on these devices such
as, for example, emptiness, finiteness, universality, equivalence, etc. These
strong negative results trigger the study of subclasses and alternative
characterizations of multi-head finite automata for a better understanding of
the nature of non-recursive trade-offs and, thus, the borderline between
decidable and undecidable problems. In the present paper, we tour a fragment of
this literature
Complexity of Two-Dimensional Patterns
In dynamical systems such as cellular automata and iterated maps, it is often
useful to look at a language or set of symbol sequences produced by the system.
There are well-established classification schemes, such as the Chomsky
hierarchy, with which we can measure the complexity of these sets of sequences,
and thus the complexity of the systems which produce them.
In this paper, we look at the first few levels of a hierarchy of complexity
for two-or-more-dimensional patterns. We show that several definitions of
``regular language'' or ``local rule'' that are equivalent in d=1 lead to
distinct classes in d >= 2. We explore the closure properties and computational
complexity of these classes, including undecidability and L-, NL- and
NP-completeness results.
We apply these classes to cellular automata, in particular to their sets of
fixed and periodic points, finite-time images, and limit sets. We show that it
is undecidable whether a CA in d >= 2 has a periodic point of a given period,
and that certain ``local lattice languages'' are not finite-time images or
limit sets of any CA. We also show that the entropy of a d-dimensional CA's
finite-time image cannot decrease faster than t^{-d} unless it maps every
initial condition to a single homogeneous state.Comment: To appear in J. Stat. Phy
A parametric analysis of the state-explosion problem in model checking
AbstractIn model checking, the state-explosion problem occurs when one checks a nonflat system, i.e., a system implicitly described as a synchronized product of elementary subsystems. In this paper, we investigate the complexity of a wide variety of model-checking problems for nonflat systems under the light of parameterized complexity, taking the number of synchronized components as a parameter. We provide precise complexity measures (in the parameterized sense) for most of the problems we investigate, and evidence that the results are robust
Sublogarithmic bounds on space and reversals
The complexity measure under consideration is SPACE x REVERSALS for Turing machines that are able to branch both existentially and universally. We show that, for any function h(n) between log log n and log n, Pi(1) SPACE x REVERSALS(h(n)) is separated from Sigma(1)SPACE x REVERSALS(h(n)) as well as from co Sigma(1)SPACE x REVERSALS(h(n)), for middle, accept, and weak modes of this complexity measure. This also separates determinism from the higher levels of the alternating hierarchy. For "well-behaved" functions h(n) between log log n and log n, almost all of the above separations can be obtained by using unary witness languages. In addition, the construction of separating languages contributes to the research on minimal resource requirements for computational devices capable of recognizing nonregular languages. For any (arbitrarily slow growing) unbounded monotone recursive function f(n), a nonregular unary language is presented that can be accepted by a middle Pi(1) alternating Turing machine in s(n) space and i(n) input head reversals, with s(n) . i(n) is an element of O(log log n . f(n)). Thus, there is no exponential gap for the optimal lower bound on the product s(n) . i(n) between unary and general nonregular language acceptance-in sharp contrast with the one-way case
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