Constructing Deterministic Parity Automata from Positive and Negative Examples
We present a polynomial time algorithm that constructs a deterministic parity automaton (DPA) from a given set of positive and negative ultimately periodic example words. We show that this algorithm is complete for the class of $\omega$-regular languages, that is, it can learn a DPA for each regular...
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Veröffentlicht in: | TheoretiCS 2024-07, Vol.3 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | We present a polynomial time algorithm that constructs a deterministic parity
automaton (DPA) from a given set of positive and negative ultimately periodic
example words. We show that this algorithm is complete for the class of
$\omega$-regular languages, that is, it can learn a DPA for each regular
$\omega$-language. For use in the algorithm, we give a definition of a DPA,
that we call the precise DPA of a language, and show that it can be constructed
from the syntactic family of right congruences for that language (introduced by
Maler and Staiger in 1997). Depending on the structure of the language, the
precise DPA can be of exponential size compared to a minimal DPA, but it can
also be a minimal DPA. The upper bound that we obtain on the number of examples
required for our algorithm to find a DPA for $L$ is therefore exponential in
the size of a minimal DPA, in general. However we identify two parameters of
regular $\omega$-languages such that fixing these parameters makes the bound
polynomial. |
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ISSN: | 2751-4838 2751-4838 |
DOI: | 10.46298/theoretics.24.17 |