Search results for "automata and formal languages"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Unambiguous recognizable two-dimensional languages

2006

We consider the family UREC of unambiguous recognizable two-dimensional languages. We prove that there are recognizable languages that are inherently ambiguous, that is UREC family is a proper subclass of REC family. The result is obtained by showing a necessary condition for unambiguous recognizable languages. Further UREC family coincides with the class of picture languages defined by unambiguous 2OTA and it strictly contains its deterministic counterpart. Some closure and non-closure properties of UREC are presented. Finally we show that it is undecidable whether a given tiling system is unambiguous.

DeterminismSettore INF/01 - InformaticaDeterministic context-free languageGeneral MathematicsTwo-dimensional languagesAutomata and formal languages; Determinism; Two-dimensional languages; UnambiguityComputer Science::Computation and Language (Computational Linguistics and Natural Language and Speech Processing)Class (philosophy)Computer Science ApplicationsUndecidable problemAutomata and Formal Languages. ; Unambiguity ; Determinism. .; Two-dimensional languagesCombinatoricsClosure (mathematics)Computer Science::Programming LanguagesAutomata and formal languagesDeterminism.ArithmeticComputer Science::Formal Languages and Automata TheorySoftwareUnambiguityMathematics
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Forbidden words in symbolic dynamics

2000

AbstractWe introduce an equivalence relation≃between functions from N to N. By describing a symbolic dynamical system in terms of forbidden words, we prove that the≃-equivalence class of the function that counts the minimal forbidden words of a system is a topological invariant of the system. We show that the new invariant is independent from previous ones, but it is not characteristic. In the case of sofic systems, we prove that the≃-equivalence of the corresponding functions is a decidable question. As a more special application, we show, by using the new invariant, that two systems associated to Sturmian words having “different slope” are not conjugate.

Discrete mathematicsApplied Mathematicsautomata and formal languages010102 general mathematics[INFO.INFO-DS]Computer Science [cs]/Data Structures and Algorithms [cs.DS]Symbolic dynamics[INFO.INFO-DS] Computer Science [cs]/Data Structures and Algorithms [cs.DS]0102 computer and information sciencesFunction (mathematics)16. Peace & justice01 natural sciencesDecidabilitysymbolic dynamics010201 computation theory & mathematicsEquivalence relationcombinatoric on words0101 mathematicsInvariant (mathematics)Dynamical system (definition)Equivalence (measure theory)Computer Science::Formal Languages and Automata TheoryWord (group theory)ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSMathematics
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The Descriptive Complexity Approach to LOGCFL

1998

Building upon the known generalized-quantifier-based first-order characterization of LOGCFL, we lay the groundwork for a deeper investigation. Specifically, we examine subclasses of LOGCFL arising from varying the arity and nesting of groupoidal quantifiers. Our work extends the elaborate theory relating monoidal quantifiers to NC1 and its subclasses. In the absence of the BIT predicate, we resolve the main issues: we show in particular that no single outermost unary groupoidal quantifier with FO can capture all the context-free languages, and we obtain the surprising result that a variant of Greibach's ``hardest context-free language'' is LOGCFL-complete under quantifier-free BIT-free proj…

FOS: Computer and information sciencesFinite model theoryUnary operationComputer Networks and Communicationsautomata and formal languages0102 computer and information sciencesComputational Complexity (cs.CC)Computer Science::Computational ComplexityArityDescriptive complexity theory01 natural sciencesTheoretical Computer ScienceComputer Science::Logic in Computer ScienceNondeterministic finite automaton0101 mathematicsLOGCFLMathematicsDiscrete mathematicscomputational complexityApplied Mathematics010102 general mathematicsdescriptive complexityNondeterministic algorithmComputer Science - Computational Complexityfinite model theoryQuantifier (logic)Computational Theory and Mathematics010201 computation theory & mathematicsF.1.3Journal of Computer and System Sciences
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A trie-based approach for compacting automata

2004

International audience; We describe a new technique for reducing the number of nodes and symbols in automata based on tries. The technique stems from some results on anti-dictionaries for data compression and does not need to retain the input string, differently from other methods based on compact automata. The net effect is that of obtaining a lighter automaton than the directed acyclic word graph (DAWG) of Blumer et al., as it uses less nodes, still with arcs labeled by single characters.

automataComputer scienceSuffix tree[INFO.INFO-DS]Computer Science [cs]/Data Structures and Algorithms [cs.DS]suffix tree0102 computer and information sciences02 engineering and technologyω-automaton01 natural sciencesindex text compressionlaw.inventionlawfactor and suffixTrie0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringAutomata and formal languagesPattern matchingDirected acyclic word graphString (computer science)Directed graphDirected acyclic graphMobile automatonAutomaton010201 computation theory & mathematics020201 artificial intelligence & image processingAlgorithmComputer Science::Formal Languages and Automata Theory
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