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Remarks on the recognizability of topological components by three-dimensional automata

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Abstract

It is conjectured that the three-dimensional pattern processing has its own difficulties not arising in two-dimensional case. One of these difficulties occurs in recognizing topological properties of three-dimensional patterns because the three-dimensional neighborhood is more complicated than two-dimensional case. Generally a property or relationship is topological only if it is preserved when an arbitrary “rubber-sheet” distortion is applied to the pictures. For example, adjacency and connectedness are topological; area, elongatedness, convexity, and straightness are not. In recent years, there have been many interesting papers on digital topological properties. For example, an interlocking component was defined as a new topological property in three-dimensional digital pictures, and it was proved that no one marker automaton can recognize interlocking components in a three-dimensional digital picture. In this paper, we deal with recognizability of topological components by three-dimensional Turing machines, and investigate some properties.

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Correspondence to Makoto Sakamoto.

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This work was presented in part at the 12th International Symposium on Artificial Life and Robotics, Oita, Japan, January 25–27, 2007

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Sakamoto, M., Ito, T., Furutani, H. et al. Remarks on the recognizability of topological components by three-dimensional automata. Artif Life Robotics 13, 368–372 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10015-008-0501-0

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10015-008-0501-0

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