par Chatterjee, Krishnendu;Doyen, Laurent ;Henzinger, Thomas A.
Référence Lecture notes in computer science, 5710 LNCS, page (244-258)
Publication Publié, 2009
Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : Nondeterministic weighted automata are finite automata with numerical weights on transitions. They define quantitative languages L that assign to each word w a real number L(w). The value of an infinite word w is computed as the maximal value of all runs over w, and the value of a run as the supremum, limsup, liminf, limit average, or discounted sum of the transition weights. We introduce probabilistic weighted automata, in which the transitions are chosen in a randomized (rather than nondeterministic) fashion. Under almost-sure semantics (resp. positive semantics), the value of a word w is the largest real v such that the runs over w have value at least v with probability 1 (resp. positive probability). We study the classical questions of automata theory for probabilistic weighted automata: emptiness and universality, expressiveness, and closure under various operations on languages. For quantitative languages, emptiness and universality are defined as whether the value of some (resp. every) word exceeds a given threshold. We prove some of these questions to be decidable, and others undecidable. Regarding expressive power, we show that probabilities allow us to define a wide variety of new classes of quantitative languages, except for discounted-sum automata, where probabilistic choice is no more expressive than nondeterminism. Finally, we give an almost complete picture of the closure of various classes of probabilistic weighted automata for the following pointwise operations on quantitative languages: max, min, sum, and numerical complement. © 2009 Springer Berlin Heidelberg.