Author :
Chatterjee, Krishnendu ; Doyen, Laurent ; Henzinger, Thomas A.
Abstract :
Weighted automata are nondeterministic automata with numerical weights on transitions. They can define quantitative languages L that assign to each word w a real number L(w). In the case of infinite words, the value of a run is naturally computed as the maximum, limsup, liminf, limit average, or discounted sum of the transition weights. We study expressiveness and closure questions about these quantitative languages. We first show that the set of words with value greater than a threshold can be non-omega-regular for deterministic limit-average and discounted-sum automata, while this set is always omega-regular when the threshold is isolated (i.e., some neighborhood around the threshold contains no word). In the latter case, we prove that the omega-regular language is robust against small perturbations of the transition weights. We next consider automata with transition weights 0 or 1 and show that they are as expressive as general weighted automata in the limit-average case, but not in the discounted-sum case. Third, for quantitative languages L1 and L2, we consider the operations max(L1, L2), min(L1, L2), and 1-L1, which generalize the Boolean operations on languages, as well as the sum L1 + L2. We establish the closure properties of all classes of quantitative languages with respect to these four operations.
Keywords :
Boolean functions; deterministic automata; formal languages; number theory; set theory; Boolean operation; closure property; deterministic limit-average automata; discounted-sum automata; expressiveness property; general weighted automata; infinite word set; nondeterministic automata; nonomega-regular language; omega-regular language; quantitative language; real number; transition weight; Automata; Computational modeling; Computer science; Cost function; Delay; Embedded system; Energy consumption; Logic; Robustness; US Government; Closure operations; Expressiveness; Quantitative languages; Weighted automata;