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Foundations of System Theory: Finitary and Infinitary Conditions - 115 (Softcover reprint of the original 1st Edition 1976)

Part of the Lecture Notes in Economics and Mathematical Systems series
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This paper is one of a series in which the ideas of category theory are applied to problems of system theory.

As with the three principal earlier papers, [1-3], the emphasis is on study of the realization problem, or the problem of associating with an input-output description of a system an internal description with something analogous to a state-space.

In this paper, several sorts of machines will be discussed, which arrange themselves in the following hierarchy: Input process Machine Output process (Tree automaton) Machine >> State-behavior Machine I Adjoint Machine .(Sequential Machine) ., I Decomposable Machine (Linear System, Group Machine) Each member of the hierarchy includes members below it; examples are included in parentheaes, and each example is at its lowest possible point in the hierarchy.

There are contrived examples of output process machines and IV state-behavior machines which are not adjoint machines [3], but as yet, no examples with the accepted stature of linear systems [4], group machines [5, 6], sequential machines [7, Ch. 2], and tree automata [7, Ch. 4].

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Product Details
Springer
3642454798 / 9783642454790
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
06/12/2012
English
99 pages
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