2016
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-41114-9_13
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Minimal and Reduced Reversible Automata

Abstract: A condition characterizing the class of regular languages which have several nonisomorphic minimal reversible automata is presented. The condition concerns the structure of the minimum automaton accepting the language under consideration. It is also observed that there exist reduced reversible automata which are not minimal, in the sense that all the automata obtained by merging some of their equivalent states are irreversible. Furthermore, a sufficient condition for the existence of infinitely many reduced re… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…Contrary to the general case of regular languages, there can be more than one reduced reversible automata, up to isomorphism, recognizing the same (reversible) language. For example, see Figure 2 of [16]. In that example the minimal automaton (depicted on Subfigure (a)) is not reversible and there are two nonisomorphic reversible reduced automata recognizing the same language (with four states).…”
Section: Reversible Languagesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Contrary to the general case of regular languages, there can be more than one reduced reversible automata, up to isomorphism, recognizing the same (reversible) language. For example, see Figure 2 of [16]. In that example the minimal automaton (depicted on Subfigure (a)) is not reversible and there are two nonisomorphic reversible reduced automata recognizing the same language (with four states).…”
Section: Reversible Languagesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several variants of reversible automata were defined and studied [21,1,17]. The variant we work with (partial deterministic automata with a single initial state and and arbitrary set of final states) have been treated in [9,10,6,16,15,14]. In particular, in [6] the class of reversible languages is characterized by means of a forbidden pattern in the minimal automaton of the language in question, and an algorithm is provided to compute a minimal reversible automaton for a reversible language, given its minimal automaton.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The first works on this topic already appeared half a century ago and are due to Landauer and Bennet [9,2]. More recently, several papers presenting investigations on reversibility in space bounded Turing machines, finite automata, and other devices appeared in the literature (see, e.g., [1,15,6,10,13,3,11]).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%