A Shift-free Characterization of NP within Interval-valued Computing

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Ios Press

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info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess

Abstract

Interval-valued computing is a new computing paradigm that is based on manipulations of interval-values. Interval-values are finite unions of intervals on the unit interval [0; 1) so this kind of computing can be considered as a continuous space machine like optical computing [25]. Based on the massive parallelism of this paradigm, various intractable problems can be solved efficiently, i.e., by polynomial number of steps. In this paper, the well-known complexity classes, N P and co N P are addressed. A specific subclass of polynomial size interval-valued computations is proven to characterize N P, that is, exactly languages with non-deterministically polynomial time complexity can be decided by interval-valued computations of this subclass. This specific subclass of interval-valued computations does not use any of the shift operators, moreover the product operator is used only in the starting section of the computation. Due to the fact that interval-valued computing is a deterministic model of computing, an analogue result can be established for the class co N P

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new computing paradigms, unconventional computing, interval-valued computing, complexity, NP, coNP, massive parallelism, deterministic computing

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Fundamenta Informaticae

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Volume

155

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1-2

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