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Developments in Language Theory: 10th International Conference, DLT 2006, Santa Barbara, CA, USA, June 26-29, 2006, Proceedings
Oscar H. Ibarra ; Zhe Dang (eds.)
En conferencia: 10º International Conference on Developments in Language Theory (DLT) . Santa Barbara, CA, USA . June 26, 2006 - June 29, 2006
Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial
No disponible.
Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial
Mathematical Logic and Formal Languages; Computation by Abstract Devices; Logics and Meanings of Programs; Discrete Mathematics in Computer Science; Symbolic and Algebraic Manipulation
Disponibilidad
Institución detectada | Año de publicación | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
---|---|---|---|---|
No detectada | 2006 | SpringerLink |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
libros
ISBN impreso
978-3-540-35428-4
ISBN electrónico
978-3-540-35430-7
Editor responsable
Springer Nature
País de edición
Reino Unido
Fecha de publicación
2006
Información sobre derechos de publicación
© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2006
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
doi: 10.1007/11779148_21
Bag Context Tree Grammars
Frank Drewes; Christine du Toit; Sigrid Ewert; Brink van der Merwe; Andries P. J. van der Walt
We introduce bag context, a device for regulated rewriting in tree grammars. Rather than being part of the developing tree, bag context (bc) evolves on its own during a derivation. We show that the class of bc tree languages is the closure of the class of random context tree languages under linear top-down tree transductions. Further, an interchange theorem for subtrees of dense trees in bc tree languages is established. This result implies that the class of bc tree languages is incomparable with the class of branching synchronization tree languages.
- Papers | Pp. 226-237
doi: 10.1007/11779148_22
Closure of Language Classes Under Bounded Duplication
Masami Ito; Peter Leupold; Kayoko Shikishima-Tsuji
Duplication is an operation generating a language from a single word by iterated application of rewriting rules → on factors. We extend this operation to entire languages and investigate, whether the classes of the Chomsky hierarchy are closed under duplication. Here we treat mainly bounded duplication, where the factors duplicated cannot exceed a given length.
While over two letters the regular languages are closed under bounded duplication, over three or more letters they are not, if the length bound is 4 or greater. For 2 they are closed under duplication, the case of 3 remains open. Finally, the class of context-free languages is closed under duplication over alphabets of any size.
- Papers | Pp. 238-247
doi: 10.1007/11779148_23
The Boolean Closure of Growing Context-Sensitive Languages
Tomasz Jurdziński
The class of growing context-sensitive languages (GCSL) is a naturally defined subclass of context-sensitive languages whose membership problem is solvable in polynomial time. GCSL and its deterministic counterpart called Church-Rosser Languages (CRL) complement the Chomsky hierarchy in a natural way [9]. In this paper, the extension of GCSL obtained by closures of this class under the boolean operations are investigated. We show that there exists an infinite intersection hierarchy, answering an open problem from [1]. Further, we compare the expressive power of the boolean closures of GCSL, CRL, CFL and LOGCFL.
- Papers | Pp. 248-259
doi: 10.1007/11779148_24
Well Quasi Orders and the Shuffle Closure of Finite Sets
Flavio D’Alessandro; Gwénaël Richomme; Stefano Varricchio
Given a set of words, the set L of all words obtained by the shuffle of (copies of) words of is naturally provided with a partial order: for , in L, if and only if is the shuffle of and another word of L. In [3], the authors have stated the problem of the characterization of the finite sets such that is a well quasi-order on L. In this paper we give the answer in the case when consists of a single word .
- Papers | Pp. 260-269
doi: 10.1007/11779148_25
The Growth Ratio of Synchronous Rational Relations Is Unique
Olivier Carton
We introduce -synchronous relations for a rational number . We show that if a rational relation is both - and ′-synchronous for two different numbers and ′, then it is recognizable. We give a synchronization algorithm for -synchronous transducers. We also prove the closure under boolean operations and composition of -synchronous relations.
- Papers | Pp. 270-279
doi: 10.1007/11779148_26
On Critical Exponents in Fixed Points of Non-erasing Morphisms
Dalia Krieger
Let Σ be an alphabet of size , let :Σ→Σ be a non-erasing morphism, let be an infinite fixed point of , and let () be the critical exponent of . We prove that if () is finite, then for a uniform it is rational, and for a non-uniform it lies in the field extension , where ,..., are the eigenvalues of the incidence matrix of . In particular, () is algebraic of degree at most . Under certain conditions, our proof implies an algorithm for computing ().
68R15
- Papers | Pp. 280-291
doi: 10.1007/11779148_27
P Systems with Proteins on Membranes and Membrane Division
Andrei Păun; Bianca Popa
In this paper we present a method for solving the -complete SAT problem using the type of P systems that is defined in [9]. The SAT problem is solved in () time, where is the number of boolean variables and is the number of clauses for a instance written in conjunctive normal form. Thus we can say that the solution for each given instance is obtained in linear time. We succeeded in solving SAT by a uniform construction of a deterministic P system which uses rules involving objects in regions, proteins on membranes, and membrane division. We also investigate the computational power of the systems with proteins on membranes and show that the universality can be reached even in the case of systems that do not even use the membrane division and have only one membrane.
- Papers | Pp. 292-303
doi: 10.1007/11779148_28
Computing by Only Observing
Matteo Cavaliere; Pierluigi Frisco; Hendrik Jan Hoogeboom
The paradigm of is based on the idea that a computing device can be obtained by combining a basic system and an observer that transforms the evolution of the basic system into a readable output. In this framework we investigate what can be computed by changing the observer but not the basic observed system. We consider grammars as basic systems combined with finite state automata as observers, watching either the sequence of sentential forms or the productions used by the grammar. It is possible to obtain computational completeness only varying the observer, without modifying the basic system, which is a fixed context-free grammar.
- Papers | Pp. 304-314
doi: 10.1007/11779148_29
A Decision Procedure for Reflexive Regular Splicing Languages
Paola Bonizzoni; Giancarlo Mauri
A structural characterization of reflexive splicing languages has been recently given in [1] and [5] showing surprising connections between long standing notions in formal language theory, the syntactic monoid and Schützenberger constant and the splicing operation.
In this paper, we provide a procedure to decide whether a regular language is a reflexive splicing language, based on the above mentioned characterization that is given in terms of a finite set of constants for the language. The procedure relies on a basic result showing how to determine, given a regular language , a finite set of representatives for constant classes of the syntactic monoid of . This finite set provides the splice sites of splicing rules generating language . Indeed, we recall that in [1] it is shown that a regular splicing language is reflexive iff splice sites of the rules are constants for the language.
- Papers | Pp. 315-326
doi: 10.1007/11779148_30
Contextual Hypergraph Grammars – A New Approach to the Generation of Hypergraph Languages
Adrian-Horia Dediu; Renate Klempien-Hinrichs; Hans-Jörg Kreowski; Benedek Nagy
In this paper, we introduce contextual hypergraph grammars, which generalize the total contextual string grammars. We study the position of the class of languages generated by contextual hypergraph grammars in comparison with graph languages generated by hyperedge replacement grammars and double-pushout hypergraph grammars. Moreover, several examples show the potential of the new class of grammars.
- Papers | Pp. 327-338