English

Context-Sensitive Languages, Rational Graphs and Determinism

Logic in Computer Science 2017-01-11 v2

Abstract

We investigate families of infinite automata for context-sensitive languages. An infinite automaton is an infinite labeled graph with two sets of initial and final vertices. Its language is the set of all words labelling a path from an initial vertex to a final vertex. In 2001, Morvan and Stirling proved that rational graphs accept the context-sensitive languages between rational sets of initial and final vertices. This result was later extended to sub-families of rational graphs defined by more restricted classes of transducers. languages.<br><br> Our contribution is to provide syntactical and self-contained proofs of the above results, when earlier constructions relied on a non-trivial normal form of context-sensitive grammars defined by Penttonen in the 1970's. These new proof techniques enable us to summarize and refine these results by considering several sub-families defined by restrictions on the type of transducers, the degree of the graph or the size of the set of initial vertices.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.cs/0606053,
  title  = {Context-Sensitive Languages, Rational Graphs and Determinism},
  author = {Arnaud Carayol and Antoine Meyer},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:cs/0606053},
  year   = {2017}
}