Publication | Closed Access
On the size complexity of universal accepting hybrid networks of evolutionary processors
36
Citations
8
References
2007
Year
Size ComplexityEngineeringEvolutionary ProcessorsComputational Model TheoryComputer ArchitectureNetwork AnalysisComputational ComplexityHybrid ComputingUniversal AhnepParallel Complexity TheoryHybrid Optimization TechniqueParallel ComputingCombinatorial OptimizationModel Of ComputationEvolution-based MethodAbstract MachineComputer EngineeringComputer ScienceHybrid NetworksEvolutionary ProgrammingAutomated ReasoningFormal MethodsParallel ProgrammingTuring MachineComputability Theory
In this paper we discuss the following interesting question about accepting hybrid networks of evolutionary processors (AHNEP), which are a recently introduced bio-inspired computing model. The question is: how many processors are required in such a network to recognise a given language L ? Two answers are proposed for the most general case, when L is a recursively enumerable language, and both answers improve on the previously known bounds. In the first case the network has a number of processors that is linearly bounded by the cardinality of the tape alphabet of a Turing machine recognising the given language L . In the second case we show that an AHNEP with a fixed underlying structure can accept any recursively enumerable language. The second construction has another useful property from a practical point of view as it includes a universal AHNEP as a subnetwork, and hence only a limited number of its parameters depend on the given language.
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