posted on 2011-05-23, 15:33authored byDaniel Reidenbach, Johannes C. Schneider
A morphism h is called ambiguous for a string s if there is another morphism that maps s to the same image as h; otherwise,
it is called unambiguous. In this paper, we examine some fundamental problems on the ambiguity of erasing
morphisms. We provide a detailed analysis of so-called ambiguity partitions, and our main result uses this concept to
characterise those strings that have a morphism of strongly restricted ambiguity. Furthermore, we demonstrate that
there are strings for which the set of unambiguous morphisms, depending on the size of the target alphabet of these
morphisms, is empty, finite or infinite. Finally, we show that the problem of the existence of unambiguous erasing
morphisms is equivalent to some basic decision problems for nonerasing multi-pattern languages.
History
School
Science
Department
Computer Science
Citation
REIDENBACH, D. and SCHNEIDER, J.C., 2011. Restricted ambiguity of erasing morphisms. Theoretical Computer Science, 412 (29), pp. 3510-3523.