Descriptional and computational complexity of finite automata—A survey

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Abstract

Finite automata are probably best known for being equivalent to right-linear context-free grammars and, thus, for capturing the lowest level of the Chomsky-hierarchy, the family of regular languages. Over the last half century, a vast literature documenting the importance of deterministic, nondeterministic, and alternating finite automata as an enormously valuable concept has been developed. In the present paper, we tour a fragment of this literature. Mostly, we discuss developments relevant to finite automata related problems like, for example, (i) simulation of and by several types of finite automata, (ii) standard automata problems such as fixed and general membership, emptiness, universality, equivalence, and related problems, and (iii) minimization and approximation. We thus come across descriptional and computational complexity issues of finite automata. We do not prove these results but we merely draw attention to the big picture and some of the main ideas involved.

Keywords

Finite automata
Determinism
Nondeterminism
Alternation
Descriptional complexity
Computational complexity
Survey

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This is an extended and revised version of: M. Holzer, M. Kutrib, Descriptional and Computational Complexity of Finite Automata. Proc. 3rd Int. Conf. Language and Automata Theory and Applications, LNCS 5457, Springer-Verlag, 2009, pp. 23–42.