On the Complexity of Techniques That Make Transition Systems Implementable by Boolean Nets
Computational Complexity
2026-04-08 v3
Abstract
Synthesis consists in deciding whether a given labeled transition system (TS) can be implemented by a net of type . In case of a negative decision, it may be possible to convert into an implementable TS by applying various modification techniques, like relabeling edges that previously had the same label, suppressing edges/states/events, etc. It may however be useful to limit the number of such modifications to stay close to the original problem, or optimize the technique. In this paper, we show that most of the corresponding problems are NP-complete if corresponds to the type of flip-flop nets or some flip-flop net derivatives.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2203.09233,
title = {On the Complexity of Techniques That Make Transition Systems Implementable by Boolean Nets},
author = {Raymond Devillers and Ronny Tredup},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2203.09233},
year = {2026}
}