52 research outputs found
Multiply-Recursive Upper Bounds with Higman's Lemma
We develop a new analysis for the length of controlled bad sequences in
well-quasi-orderings based on Higman's Lemma. This leads to tight
multiply-recursive upper bounds that readily apply to several verification
algorithms for well-structured systems
Decidability in the logic of subsequences and supersequences
We consider first-order logics of sequences ordered by the subsequence
ordering, aka sequence embedding. We show that the \Sigma_2 theory is
undecidable, answering a question left open by Kuske. Regarding fragments with
a bounded number of variables, we show that the FO2 theory is decidable while
the FO3 theory is undecidable
On shuffle products, acyclic automata and piecewise-testable languages
We show that the shuffle L \unicode{x29E2} F of a piecewise-testable
language and a finite language is piecewise-testable. The proof relies
on a classic but little-used automata-theoretic characterization of
piecewise-testable languages. We also discuss some mild generalizations of the
main result, and provide bounds on the piecewise complexity of L
\unicode{x29E2} F
On Ordinal Invariants in Well Quasi Orders and Finite Antichain Orders
We investigate the ordinal invariants height, length, and width of well quasi
orders (WQO), with particular emphasis on width, an invariant of interest for
the larger class of orders with finite antichain condition (FAC). We show that
the width in the class of FAC orders is completely determined by the width in
the class of WQOs, in the sense that if we know how to calculate the width of
any WQO then we have a procedure to calculate the width of any given FAC order.
We show how the width of WQO orders obtained via some classical constructions
can sometimes be computed in a compositional way. In particular, this allows
proving that every ordinal can be obtained as the width of some WQO poset. One
of the difficult questions is to give a complete formula for the width of
Cartesian products of WQOs. Even the width of the product of two ordinals is
only known through a complex recursive formula. Although we have not given a
complete answer to this question we have advanced the state of knowledge by
considering some more complex special cases and in particular by calculating
the width of certain products containing three factors. In the course of
writing the paper we have discovered that some of the relevant literature was
written on cross-purposes and some of the notions re-discovered several times.
Therefore we also use the occasion to give a unified presentation of the known
results
Verifying nondeterministic probabilistic channel systems against -regular linear-time properties
Lossy channel systems (LCSs) are systems of finite state automata that
communicate via unreliable unbounded fifo channels. In order to circumvent the
undecidability of model checking for nondeterministic
LCSs, probabilistic models have been introduced, where it can be decided
whether a linear-time property holds almost surely. However, such fully
probabilistic systems are not a faithful model of nondeterministic protocols.
We study a hybrid model for LCSs where losses of messages are seen as faults
occurring with some given probability, and where the internal behavior of the
system remains nondeterministic. Thus the semantics is in terms of
infinite-state Markov decision processes. The purpose of this article is to
discuss the decidability of linear-time properties formalized by formulas of
linear temporal logic (LTL). Our focus is on the qualitative setting where one
asks, e.g., whether a LTL-formula holds almost surely or with zero probability
(in case the formula describes the bad behaviors). Surprisingly, it turns out
that -- in contrast to finite-state Markov decision processes -- the
satisfaction relation for LTL formulas depends on the chosen type of schedulers
that resolve the nondeterminism. While all variants of the qualitative LTL
model checking problem for the full class of history-dependent schedulers are
undecidable, the same questions for finite-memory scheduler can be solved
algorithmically. However, the restriction to reachability properties and
special kinds of recurrent reachability properties yields decidable
verification problems for the full class of schedulers, which -- for this
restricted class of properties -- are as powerful as finite-memory schedulers,
or even a subclass of them.Comment: 39 page
Ackermannian and Primitive-Recursive Bounds with Dickson's Lemma
Dickson's Lemma is a simple yet powerful tool widely used in termination
proofs, especially when dealing with counters or related data structures.
However, most computer scientists do not know how to derive complexity upper
bounds from such termination proofs, and the existing literature is not very
helpful in these matters.
We propose a new analysis of the length of bad sequences over (N^k,\leq) and
explain how one may derive complexity upper bounds from termination proofs. Our
upper bounds improve earlier results and are essentially tight
The Height of Piecewise-Testable Languages with Applications in Logical Complexity
The height of a piecewise-testable language L is the maximum length of the words needed to define L by excluding and requiring given subwords. The height of L is an important descriptive complexity measure that has not yet been investigated in a systematic way. This paper develops a series of new techniques for bounding the height of finite languages and of languages obtained by taking closures by subwords, superwords and related operations.
As an application of these results, we show that FO^2(A^*, subword), the two-variable fragment of the first-order logic of sequences with the subword ordering, can only express piecewise-testable properties and has elementary complexity
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