LANGUAGE THEORY with APPLICATIONS 2017 (LTA 2017)
LTA 2017 is 7th student conference at the Faculty of Information Technology, Brno University of Technology.
Subject: Formal language theory and its applications in computer science
Place: FIT BUT, Brno, Czech Republic
Date: November 22, November 27, and December 4 - 14, 2017
Coverage:
LTA 2017 offers a variety of scientific talks on formal language theory and its computer-related applications at MSc and PhD levels. A special attention is paid to modern applications related to the language translation. Most of the talks results from the students' work in the
TID and
VYPa classes taught at FIT BUT.
Style:
Talks are presented so they clearly and quickly explain their significance to today's computer science. As a result, in some instances, results and their proofs may be merely outlined in an informal way. LTA does not tolerate presentations that hide their shallow contents behind exotic pictures.
Opening Talks: Watson-Crick Automata
Linear context-free languages and Watson-Crick automata
Speaker:
dr. Benedek Nagy, Eastern Mediterranean University, North Cyprus (Turkey)
Title: Linear context-free languages and Watson-Crick automata
Abstract: Watson-Crick automata are inspired from the Nature, as instead of a normal tape, a Watson-Crick tape, i.e., a DNA molecule is considered as input. A DNA molecule has two strands, subsequently Watson-Crick automata have two reading heads, one for each strand. DNA strands have orientation, the 5'→3' direction is preferred in some biochemical reactions. In 5'→3' Watson-Crick automata the two reading heads start from the two extremes of the input (the opposite ends of the molecule) and finish the process when the heads meet. With 5'→3' Watson-Crick finite automata the class of linear context-free languages can be accepted, and some of its subclasses by some restricted variants. Deterministic variant characterizes a proper subset of linear languages, the class 2detLIN. This class is incomparable with the traditional detLIN, the class of languages that can be accepted by deterministic 1-turn PDA.
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Level: Bc/MSc
Date: November 22, 2017, 13:00 - 13:50
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On 5' -> 3' Watson-Crick finite and pushdown automata
Speaker:
dr. Benedek Nagy, Eastern Mediterranean University, North Cyprus (Turkey)
Title: On 5' → 3' Watson-Crick finite and pushdown automata
Abstract: Watson-Crick automata are inspired from the Nature, as instead of a normal tape, a Watson-Crick tape, i.e., a DNA molecule is considered as input. A DNA molecule has two strands, subsequently Watson-Crick automata have two reading heads, one for each strand. DNA strands have orientation, the 5'→3' direction is preferred in some biochemical reactions. In 5'→3' Watson-Crick automata the two reading heads start from the two extremes of the input (the opposite ends of the molecule) and finish the process when the heads meet. With 5'→3' Watson-Crick finite automata the class of linear context-free languages can be accepted, and some of its subclasses by some restricted variants. Extending these automata with a pushdown stack, a new mildly context-sensitive family of languages can be accepted containing all the context-free languages, and the linguistically important three non-context-free languages. Variants of this model will also be shown.
Presentation: NA (in progress)
Level: PhD
Date: November 22, 2017, 14:00 - 15:00
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English: American Pronunciation (in Czech)
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Title: English: American Pronunciation (in Czech: O výslovnosti americké angličtiny)
Note: Repeated performance/Pro velký zájem je přednáška
opakována.
Abstract (in Czech): Výslovnost americké angličtiny obsahuje některé zvuky, které Čech imituje chybně. Učitelé, včetně rodilých mluvčích, tyto odchylky zpravidla tolerují a spokojí se s touto nesprávně provedenou imitací, pokud je alespoň trochu srozumitelná. Prezentovaná přednáška naopak na tyto zvuky explicitně upozorní a načrtne, jak je vysloví Američan. Prezentace bude mít neformální charakter.
Date: November 27, 2017, 11:00 - 12:00
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Culture Talk: Chuck Berry (in Czech)
Culture Event: Poetry Reading (in Czech)
Title: Cestou Václava Hraběte
Date: December 5, 2017, 19:00
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Reciter: Alexander Meduna
Conference Schedule
The list of talks in VYPa and TID courses follows.
SESSION 1: Compiler Construction I (Monday, December 4, 2017, 11:00-13:00, G202)
SESSION 2: Modern Theoretical Computer Science I (Thursday, December 7, 2017, 11:00-13:00, C228)
Invited short talk, 11:00-11:30:
Jakub Martiško: CD Grammar Systems with Two Propagating Scattered Context Components Characterize the Family of Context Sensitive Languages
Abstract: The L(PSCG)=L(CS) problem asks whether propagating scattered context grammars and context sensitive grammars are equivalent. The presented paper reformulates and answers this problem in terms of CD grammar systems. More specifically, it characterizes the family of context sensitive languages by two-component CD grammar systems with propagating scattered context rules.
Regular talks, 11:30 - 12:45:
SESSION 3: Compiler Construction II (Monday, December 11, 2017, 11:00-13:00, G202)
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Talk duration: 15 minutes (including discussion)
Level: MSc
Talks: Formalisms, Paradigms, and Code generation
SESSION 4: Modern Theoretical Computer Science II (Thursday, December 14, 2017, 11:00-13:00, A113)
Invited short talk, 11:00-11:30:
Radim Kocman: General CD Grammar Systems and Their Simplification
Abstract: This talk introduces general CD grammar systems, whose components are general grammars, so they are computationally complete—that is, they characterize the family of recursively enumerable languages. We investigate them working under the * mode and the t mode. Most importantly, we will present two transformations that turn arbitrary general grammars into equivalent two-component general CD grammar systems with a context-free component and a non-context-free component. From one transformation, the non-context-free component results with two rules of the form 11 → 00 and 0000 → 2222, while the other transformation produces the non-context-free component with two rules of the form 11 → 00 and 0000 → eps. Apart from this significant reduction and simplification, our research describes several other useful properties concerning these systems and the way they work. We will show that the resulting systems can closely simulate their original grammar and that their sentence generation process can be handled in a parallel way.
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Regular talks, 11:30 - 12:45:
Future Volumes of LTA
Conference history