Lower bounds for the state complexity of probabilistic languages and the language of prime numbers

Author:

Fijalkow NathanaËl1

Affiliation:

1. CNRS, LaBRI, Talence, 33405 Bordeaux, France and The Alan Turing Institute of Data Science and Artificial Intelligence, London

Abstract

Abstract This paper studies the complexity of languages of finite words using automata theory. To go beyond the class of regular languages, we consider infinite automata and the notion of state complexity defined by Karp. Motivated by the seminal paper of Rabin from 1963 introducing probabilistic automata, we study the (deterministic) state complexity of probabilistic languages and prove that probabilistic languages can have arbitrarily high deterministic state complexity. We then look at alternating automata as introduced by Chandra, Kozen and Stockmeyer: such machines run independent computations on the word and gather their answers through boolean combinations. We devise a lower bound technique relying on boundedly generated lattices of languages, and give two applications of this technique. The first is a hierarchy theorem, stating that there are languages of arbitrarily high polynomial alternating state complexity, and the second is a linear lower bound on the alternating state complexity of the prime numbers written in binary. This second result strengthens a result of Hartmanis and Shank from 1968, which implies an exponentially worse lower bound for the same model.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Logic,Hardware and Architecture,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Software,Theoretical Computer Science

Reference30 articles.

1. The online space complexity of probabilistic languages;Fijalkow,2016

2. The state complexity of alternating automata;Fijalkow,2018

3. Some bounds on the storage requirements of sequential machines and Turing machines;Karp;Journal of the ACM,1967

4. Linear automaton transformations;Nerode;Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society,1958

5. Two memory bounds for the recognition of primes by automata;Hartmanis;Mathematical Systems Theory,1969

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