Abstract. A tree automaton with global tree equality and disequality constraints, TAGED for short, is an automaton on trees which allows to test (dis)equalities between subtrees which may be arbitrarily faraway. In particular, it is equipped with an (dis)equality relation on states, so that whenever two subtrees t and t ′ evaluate (in an accepting run) to two states which are in the (dis)equality relation, they must be (dis)equal. We study several properties of TAGEDs, and prove decidability of emptiness of several classes. We give two applications of TAGEDs: decidability of an extension of Monadic Second Order Logic with tree isomorphism tests and of unification with membership constraints. These results significantly improve the results of [10].
We settle the complexity bounds of the model checking problem for the ambient calculus with public names against the ambient logic. We show that if either the calculus contains replication or the logic contains the guarantee operator, the problem is undecidable. In the case of the replication-free calculus and guarantee-free logic we prove that the problem is PSPACE-complete. For the complexity upper-bound, we devise a new representation of processes that remains of polynomial size during process execution; this allows us to keep the model checking procedure in polynomial space. Moreover, we prove PSPACE-hardness of the problem for several quite simple fragments of the calculus and the logic; this suggests that there are no interesting fragments with polynomial-time model checking algorithms.
We investigate n-ary node selection queries in trees by successful runs of tree automata. We show that run-based n-ary queries capture MSO, contribute algorithms for enumerating answers of n-ary queries, and study the complexity of the problem. We investigate the subclass of run-based n-ary queries by unambiguous tree automata.
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