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On Separation by Locally Testable and Locally Threshold Testable Languages

Thomas Place ; Lorijn van Rooijen ; Marc Zeitoun.
A separator for two languages is a third language containing the first one and disjoint from the second one. We investigate the following decision problem: given two regular input languages, decide whether there exists a locally testable (resp. a locally threshold testable) separator. In both cases,&nbsp;[&hellip;]
Published on September 18, 2014

A decidable characterization of locally testable tree languages

Thomas Place ; Luc Segoufin.
A regular tree language L is locally testable if membership of a tree in L depends only on the presence or absence of some fix set of neighborhoods in the tree. In this paper we show that it is decidable whether a regular tree language is locally testable. The decidability is shown for ranked trees&nbsp;[&hellip;]
Published on November 22, 2011

The Covering Problem

Thomas Place ; Marc Zeitoun.
An important endeavor in computer science is to understand the expressive power of logical formalisms over discrete structures, such as words. Naturally, "understanding" is not a mathematical notion. This investigation requires therefore a concrete objective to capture this understanding. In the&nbsp;[&hellip;]
Published on July 20, 2018

Separating regular languages with two quantifier alternations

Thomas Place.
We investigate a famous decision problem in automata theory: separation. Given a class of language C, the separation problem for C takes as input two regular languages and asks whether there exists a third one which belongs to C, includes the first one and is disjoint from the second. Typically,&nbsp;[&hellip;]
Published on November 16, 2018

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