Graded Computation Tree Logic
In modal logics, graded (world) modalities have been deeply investigated as a useful framework for generalizing standard existential and universal modalities in such a way that they can express statements about a given number of immediately accessible worlds. These modalities have been recently inve...
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Published in: | 2009 24th Annual IEEE Symposium on Logic In Computer Science pp. 342 - 351 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Conference Proceeding |
Language: | English |
Published: |
IEEE
01-08-2009
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | In modal logics, graded (world) modalities have been deeply investigated as a useful framework for generalizing standard existential and universal modalities in such a way that they can express statements about a given number of immediately accessible worlds. These modalities have been recently investigated with respect to the mu-calculus, which have provided succinctness, without affecting the satisfiability of the extended logic, i.e., it remains solvable in ExpTime. A natural question that arises is how logics that allow reasoning about paths could be affected by considering graded path modalities. In this paper, we investigate this question in the case of the branching-time temporal logic CTL (GCTL, for short). We prove that, although GCTL is more expressive than CTL, the satisfiability problem for GCTL remains solvable in ExpTime. This result is obtained by exploiting an automata-theoretic approach. In particular, we introduce the class of partitioning alternating Buumlchi tree automata and show that the emptiness problem for them is ExpTime-Complete. The satisfiability result turns even more interesting as we show that GCTL is exponentially more succinct than graded mu-calculus. |
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ISBN: | 0769537464 9780769537467 |
ISSN: | 1043-6871 2575-5528 |
DOI: | 10.1109/LICS.2009.28 |