We consider the four families of recognizable, synchronous, deterministic rational and rational subsets of a direct product of free monoids. They form a strict hierarchy and we investigate the following decision problem: given a relation in one of the families, does it belong to a smaller family? We settle the problem entirely when all monoids have a unique generator and fill some gaps in the general case. In particular, adapting a proof of Stearns, we show that it is recursively decidable whether or not a deterministic subset of an arbitrary number of free monoids is recognizable. Also we exhibit a single exponential algorithm for determining if a synchronous relation is recognizable
AbstractA class of monoids that can model partial reversibility allowing simultaneously instances of...
AbstractWe use language theory to study the rational subset problem for groups and monoids. We show ...
We use language theory to study the rational subset problem for groups and monoids. We show that the...
We consider the four families of recognizable, synchronous, deterministic rational and rational subs...
We consider the four families of recognizable, synchronous, deterministic rational and rational subs...
We consider the four families of recognizable, synchronous, deterministic rational and rational subs...
Given a direct product of monoids $M=A^*\times \N^m$ where $A$ is finite and $\N$ is the additive mo...
AbstractWe shall provide a ‘simple’ algorithm allowing, with formal power series, to decide whether ...
AbstractWe show that any finite monoid or semigroup presentation satisfying the small overlap condit...
AbstractIn this paper we prove that the problem of deciding whether a deterministic rational relatio...
Abstract. Kleene's theorem on recognizable languages in free monoids is considered to be of emi...
We consider decision problems for relations over finite and infinite wordsdefined by finite automata...
Partially lossy queue monoids (or plq monoids) model the behavior of queues that can forget arbitrar...
Monadic decomposibility - the ability to determine whether a formula in a given logical theory can b...
AbstractThis paper proves two results. (1) Given two bounded context-free languages, it is recursive...
AbstractA class of monoids that can model partial reversibility allowing simultaneously instances of...
AbstractWe use language theory to study the rational subset problem for groups and monoids. We show ...
We use language theory to study the rational subset problem for groups and monoids. We show that the...
We consider the four families of recognizable, synchronous, deterministic rational and rational subs...
We consider the four families of recognizable, synchronous, deterministic rational and rational subs...
We consider the four families of recognizable, synchronous, deterministic rational and rational subs...
Given a direct product of monoids $M=A^*\times \N^m$ where $A$ is finite and $\N$ is the additive mo...
AbstractWe shall provide a ‘simple’ algorithm allowing, with formal power series, to decide whether ...
AbstractWe show that any finite monoid or semigroup presentation satisfying the small overlap condit...
AbstractIn this paper we prove that the problem of deciding whether a deterministic rational relatio...
Abstract. Kleene's theorem on recognizable languages in free monoids is considered to be of emi...
We consider decision problems for relations over finite and infinite wordsdefined by finite automata...
Partially lossy queue monoids (or plq monoids) model the behavior of queues that can forget arbitrar...
Monadic decomposibility - the ability to determine whether a formula in a given logical theory can b...
AbstractThis paper proves two results. (1) Given two bounded context-free languages, it is recursive...
AbstractA class of monoids that can model partial reversibility allowing simultaneously instances of...
AbstractWe use language theory to study the rational subset problem for groups and monoids. We show ...
We use language theory to study the rational subset problem for groups and monoids. We show that the...