The efficiency of identifying timed automata and the power of clocks

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ic.2010.11.023Get rights and content
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Abstract

We develop theory on the efficiency of identifying (learning) timed automata. In particular, we show that: (i) deterministic timed automata cannot be identified efficiently in the limit from labeled data and (ii) that one-clock deterministic timed automata can be identified efficiently in the limit from labeled data. We prove these results based on the distinguishability of these classes of timed automata. More specifically, we prove that the languages of deterministic timed automata cannot, and that one-clock deterministic timed automata can be distinguished from each other using strings in length bounded by a polynomial. In addition, we provide an algorithm that identifies one-clock deterministic timed automata efficiently from labeled data.

Our results have interesting consequences for the power of clocks that are interesting also out of the scope of the identification problem.

Keywords

Deterministic timed automata
Identification in the limit
Complexity

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The main part of this research was performed when the first author was a PhD student at Delft University of Technology. It has been supported and funded by the Dutch Ministry of Economical Affairs under the SENTER program.