{"title":"Token Games and History-Deterministic Quantitative-Automata","authors":"Udi Boker, Karoliina Lehtinen","doi":"10.46298/lmcs-19(4:8)2023","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"A nondeterministic automaton is history-deterministic if its nondeterminism can be resolved by only considering the prefix of the word read so far. Due to their good compositional properties, history-deterministic automata are useful in solving games and synthesis problems. Deciding whether a given nondeterministic automaton is history-deterministic (the HDness problem) is generally a difficult task, which can involve an exponential procedure, or even be undecidable, as is the case for example with pushdown automata. Token games provide a PTime solution to the HDness problem of B\\\"uchi and coB\\\"uchi automata, and it is conjectured that 2-token games characterise HDness for all $\\omega$-regular automata. We extend token games to the quantitative setting and analyse their potential to help deciding HDness of quantitative automata. In particular, we show that 1-token games characterise HDness for all quantitative (and Boolean) automata on finite words, as well as discounted-sum (DSum), Inf and Reachability automata on infinite words, and that 2-token games characterise HDness of LimInf and LimSup automata, as well as Sup automata on infinite words. Using these characterisations, we provide solutions to the HDness problem of Safety, Reachability, Inf and Sup automata on finite and infinite words in PTime, of DSum automata on finite and infinite words in NP$\\cap$co-NP, of LimSup automata in quasipolynomial time, and of LimInf automata in exponential time, where the latter two are only polynomial for automata with a logarithmic number of weights.","PeriodicalId":49904,"journal":{"name":"Logical Methods in Computer Science","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.6000,"publicationDate":"2023-11-03","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Logical Methods in Computer Science","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.46298/lmcs-19(4:8)2023","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"数学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"COMPUTER SCIENCE, THEORY & METHODS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
A nondeterministic automaton is history-deterministic if its nondeterminism can be resolved by only considering the prefix of the word read so far. Due to their good compositional properties, history-deterministic automata are useful in solving games and synthesis problems. Deciding whether a given nondeterministic automaton is history-deterministic (the HDness problem) is generally a difficult task, which can involve an exponential procedure, or even be undecidable, as is the case for example with pushdown automata. Token games provide a PTime solution to the HDness problem of B\"uchi and coB\"uchi automata, and it is conjectured that 2-token games characterise HDness for all $\omega$-regular automata. We extend token games to the quantitative setting and analyse their potential to help deciding HDness of quantitative automata. In particular, we show that 1-token games characterise HDness for all quantitative (and Boolean) automata on finite words, as well as discounted-sum (DSum), Inf and Reachability automata on infinite words, and that 2-token games characterise HDness of LimInf and LimSup automata, as well as Sup automata on infinite words. Using these characterisations, we provide solutions to the HDness problem of Safety, Reachability, Inf and Sup automata on finite and infinite words in PTime, of DSum automata on finite and infinite words in NP$\cap$co-NP, of LimSup automata in quasipolynomial time, and of LimInf automata in exponential time, where the latter two are only polynomial for automata with a logarithmic number of weights.
期刊介绍:
Logical Methods in Computer Science is a fully refereed, open access, free, electronic journal. It welcomes papers on theoretical and practical areas in computer science involving logical methods, taken in a broad sense; some particular areas within its scope are listed below. Papers are refereed in the traditional way, with two or more referees per paper. Copyright is retained by the author.
Topics of Logical Methods in Computer Science:
Algebraic methods
Automata and logic
Automated deduction
Categorical models and logic
Coalgebraic methods
Computability and Logic
Computer-aided verification
Concurrency theory
Constraint programming
Cyber-physical systems
Database theory
Defeasible reasoning
Domain theory
Emerging topics: Computational systems in biology
Emerging topics: Quantum computation and logic
Finite model theory
Formalized mathematics
Functional programming and lambda calculus
Inductive logic and learning
Interactive proof checking
Logic and algorithms
Logic and complexity
Logic and games
Logic and probability
Logic for knowledge representation
Logic programming
Logics of programs
Modal and temporal logics
Program analysis and type checking
Program development and specification
Proof complexity
Real time and hybrid systems
Reasoning about actions and planning
Satisfiability
Security
Semantics of programming languages
Term rewriting and equational logic
Type theory and constructive mathematics.