DocumentCode :
3295395
Title :
Tree canonization and transitive closure
Author :
Etessami, Kousha ; Immerman, Neil
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Massachusetts Univ., Amherst, MA, USA
fYear :
1995
fDate :
26-29 Jun 1995
Firstpage :
331
Lastpage :
341
Abstract :
We prove that tree isomorphism is not expressible in the language (FO+TC+COUNT). This is surprising since in the presence of ordering the language captures NL, whereas tree isomorphism and canonization are in L (Lindell, 1992). Our proof uses an Ehrenfeucht-Fraisse game for transitive closure logic with counting. As a corresponding upper bound, we show that tree canonization is expressible in (FO+COUNT)[log n]. The best previous upper bound had been (FO+COUNT)[n 0(1)] (Dublish and Maheshwari, 1990). The lower bound remains true for bounded-degree trees, and we show that for bounded-degree trees counting is not needed in the upper bound. These results are the first separations of the unordered versions of the logical languages for NL, AC1, and ThC1. Our results were motivated by a conjecture in (Etessami and Immerman, 1995) that (FO+TC+COUNT+1LO)=NL, i.e., that a one-way local ordering sufficed to capture NL. We disprove this conjecture, but we prove that a two-way local ordering does suffice, i.e., (FO+TC+COUNT+2LO)=NL
Keywords :
computational complexity; formal languages; formal logic; game theory; trees (mathematics); Ehrenfeucht-Fraisse game; bounded-degree trees; counting; logical languages; lower bound; one-way local ordering; transitive closure; tree canonization; tree isomorphism; two-way local ordering; upper bound; Computer science; Logic; Robustness; Tree graphs; Upper bound;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Logic in Computer Science, 1995. LICS '95. Proceedings., Tenth Annual IEEE Symposium on
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA
ISSN :
1043-6871
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-7050-9
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/LICS.1995.523268
Filename :
523268
Link To Document :
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