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We study the problems of finding a shortest synchronizing word and its length for a given prefix code. This is done in two different settings: when the code is defined by an arbitrary decoder recognizing its star and when the code is defined by its literal decoder (whose size is polynomially equivalent to the total length of all words in the code). For the first case for every $varepsilon > 0$ we prove $n^{1 - varepsilon}$-inapproximability for recognizable binary maximal prefix codes, $Theta(log n)$-inapproximability for finite binary maximal prefix codes and $n^{frac{1}{2} - varepsilon}$-inapproximability for finite binary prefix codes. By $c$-inapproximability here we mean the non-existence of a $c$-approximation polynomial time algorithm under the assumption P $ e$ NP, and by $n$ the number of states of the decoder in the input. For the second case, we propose approximation and exact algorithms and conjecture that for finite maximal prefix codes the problem can be solved in polynomial time. We also study the related problems of finding a shortest mortal and a shortest avoiding word.
In [1], we introduced the weakly synchronizing languages for probabilistic automata. In this report, we show that the emptiness problem of weakly synchronizing languages for probabilistic automata is undecidable. This implies that the decidability re
We consider the problem {sc Max Sync Set} of finding a maximum synchronizing set of states in a given automaton. We show that the decision version of this problem is PSPACE-complete and investigate the approximability of {sc Max Sync Set} for binary
We compute all synchronizing DFAs with 7 states and synchronization length >= 29. Furthermore, we compute alphabet size ranges for maximal, minimal and semi-minimal synchronizing DFAs with up to 7 states.
It was conjectured by v{C}erny in 1964, that a synchronizing DFA on $n$ states always has a synchronizing word of length at most $(n-1)^2$, and he gave a sequence of DFAs for which this bound is reached. Until now a full analysis of all DFAs reaching
Instead of looking at the lengths of synchronizing words as in v{C}ernys conjecture, we look at the switch count of such words, that is, we only count the switches from one letter to another. Where the synchronizing words of the v{C}erny automata $ma