Arrow Research search
Back to CSL

CSL 2008

Quantitative Languages

Conference Paper Contributed Papers Logic in Computer Science ยท Theoretical Computer Science

Abstract

Abstract Quantitative generalizations of classical languages, which assign to each word a real number instead of a boolean value, have applications in modeling resource-constrained computation. We use weighted automata (finite automata with transition weights) to define several natural classes of quantitative languages over finite and infinite words; in particular, the real value of an infinite run is computed as the maximum, limsup, liminf, limit average, or discounted sum of the transition weights. We define the classical decision problems of automata theory (emptiness, universality, language inclusion, and language equivalence) in the quantitative setting and study their computational complexity. As the decidability of language inclusion remains open for some classes of weighted automata, we introduce a notion of quantitative simulation that is decidable and implies language inclusion. We also give a complete characterization of the expressive power of the various classes of weighted automata. In particular, we show that most classes of weighted automata cannot be determinized.

Authors

Keywords

No keywords are indexed for this paper.

Context

Venue
Annual Conference on Computer Science Logic
Archive span
1988-2026
Indexed papers
1413
Paper id
641680077506289146