We study dynamic modal operators that can change the accessibility relation of a model during the evaluation of a formula. In particular, we extend the basic modal language with modalities that are able to delete, add or swap an edge between pairs of elements of the domain. We define a generic framework to characterize this kind of operations. First, we investigate relation-changing modal logics as fragments of classical logics. Then, we use the new framework to get a suitable notion of bisimulation for the logics introduced, and we investigate their expressive power. Finally, we show that the complexity of the model checking problem for the particular operators introduced is PSpace-complete, and we study two subproblems of model checking: formula complexity and program complexity.
We investigate dynamic modal operators that can change the model during evaluation. We define the logic SL by extending the basic modal language with the ♦ modality, which is a diamond operator that in addition has the ability to invert pairs of related elements in the domain while traversing an edge of the accessibility relation. SL is very expressive: it fails to have the finite and the tree model property. We show that SL is equivalent to a fragment of first-order logic by providing a satisfiability preserving translation. In addition, we provide an equivalence preserving translation from SL to the hybrid logic H(:, ↓). We also define a suitable notion of bisimulation for SL and investigate its expressive power, showing that it lies strictly between the basic modal logic and H(:, ↓). We finally show that its model checking problem is PSpace-complete and its satisfiability problem is undecidable.
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