English

Dichotomy Results for Fixed-Point Existence Problems for Boolean Dynamical Systems

Computational Complexity 2008-12-01 v2 Disordered Systems and Neural Networks Discrete Mathematics Adaptation and Self-Organizing Systems Cellular Automata and Lattice Gases

Abstract

A complete classification of the computational complexity of the fixed-point existence problem for boolean dynamical systems, i.e., finite discrete dynamical systems over the domain {0, 1}, is presented. For function classes F and graph classes G, an (F, G)-system is a boolean dynamical system such that all local transition functions lie in F and the underlying graph lies in G. Let F be a class of boolean functions which is closed under composition and let G be a class of graphs which is closed under taking minors. The following dichotomy theorems are shown: (1) If F contains the self-dual functions and G contains the planar graphs then the fixed-point existence problem for (F, G)-systems with local transition function given by truth-tables is NP-complete; otherwise, it is decidable in polynomial time. (2) If F contains the self-dual functions and G contains the graphs having vertex covers of size one then the fixed-point existence problem for (F, G)-systems with local transition function given by formulas or circuits is NP-complete; otherwise, it is decidable in polynomial time.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0801.3802,
  title  = {Dichotomy Results for Fixed-Point Existence Problems for Boolean Dynamical Systems},
  author = {Sven Kosub},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0801.3802},
  year   = {2008}
}

Comments

17 pages; this version corrects an error/typo in the 2008/01/24 version

R2 v1 2026-06-21T10:06:11.552Z