The Descriptive Complexity of the Deterministic Exponential Time Hierarchy
Author(s) -
Cibele Freire,
Ana Teresa Martins
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
electronic notes in theoretical computer science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.242
H-Index - 60
ISSN - 1571-0661
DOI - 10.1016/j.entcs.2011.03.006
Subject(s) - descriptive complexity theory , hierarchy , corollary , mathematics , complexity class , pspace , class (philosophy) , operator (biology) , transitive closure , discrete mathematics , time complexity , transitive relation , order (exchange) , computational complexity theory , algebra over a field , computer science , combinatorics , algorithm , pure mathematics , artificial intelligence , market economy , biochemistry , chemistry , finance , repressor , transcription factor , economics , gene
In Descriptive Complexity, we investigate the use of logics to characterize computational complexity classes. Since 1974, when Fagin proved that the class NP is captured by existential second-order logic, considered the first result in this area, other relations between logics and complexity classes have been established. Well-known results usually involve first-order logic and its extensions, and complexity classes in polynomial time or space. Some examples are that the first-order logic extended by the least fixed-point operator captures the class P and the second-order logic extended by the transitive closure operator captures the class PSPACE. In this paper, we will analyze the combined use of higher-order logics of order i, HOi, for i⩾2, extended by the least fixed-point operator, and we will prove that each level of this hierarchy captures each level of the deterministic exponential time hierarchy. As a corollary, we will prove that the hierarchy of HOi(LFP), for i⩾2, does not collapse, that is, HOi(LFP)⊂HOi+1(LFP)
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