Degrees of Infinite Words, Polynomials and Atoms




Endrullis J, Karhumaki J, Klop JW, Saarela A

PublisherWORLD SCIENTIFIC PUBL CO PTE LTD

2018

International Journal of Foundations of Computer Science

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF FOUNDATIONS OF COMPUTER SCIENCE

INT J FOUND COMPUT S

29

05

825

843

19

0129-0541

1793-6373

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1142/S0129054118420066

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/35741209



We study finite-state transducers and their power for transforming infinite words. Infinite sequences of symbols are of paramount importance in a wide range of fields, from formal languages to pure mathematics and physics. While finite automata for recognising and transforming languages are well-understood, very little is known about the power of automata to transform infinite words.The word transformation realised by finite-state transducers gives rise to a complexity comparison of words and thereby induces equivalence classes, called (transducer) degrees, and a partial order on these degrees. The ensuing hierarchy of degrees is analogous to the recursion-theoretic degrees of unsolvability, also known as Turing degrees, where the transformational devices are Turing machines. However, as a complexity measure, Turing machines are too strong: they trivialise the classification problem by identifying all computable words. Finite-state transducers give rise to a much more fine-grained, discriminating hierarchy. In contrast to Turing degrees, hardly anything is known about transducer degrees, in spite of their naturality.We use methods from linear algebra and analysis to show that there are infinitely many atoms in the transducer degrees, that is, minimal non-trivial degrees.

Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 13:26