English

One-Tape Turing Machine Variants and Language Recognition

Formal Languages and Automata Theory 2015-07-31 v1 Computational Complexity

Abstract

We present two restricted versions of one-tape Turing machines. Both characterize the class of context-free languages. In the first version, proposed by Hibbard in 1967 and called limited automata, each tape cell can be rewritten only in the first dd visits, for a fixed constant d2d\geq 2. Furthermore, for d=2d=2 deterministic limited automata are equivalent to deterministic pushdown automata, namely they characterize deterministic context-free languages. Further restricting the possible operations, we consider strongly limited automata. These models still characterize context-free languages. However, the deterministic version is less powerful than the deterministic version of limited automata. In fact, there exist deterministic context-free languages that are not accepted by any deterministic strongly limited automaton.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1507.08582,
  title  = {One-Tape Turing Machine Variants and Language Recognition},
  author = {Giovanni Pighizzini},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1507.08582},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

20 pages. This article will appear in the Complexity Theory Column of the September 2015 issue of SIGACT News

R2 v1 2026-06-22T10:22:36.758Z