RNA-Editing with Combined Insertion and Deletion Preserves Regularity

We consider two elementary forms of string rewriting called guided insertion/deletion and guided rewriting. The original strings are modified depending on the match with a given set of auxiliary strings, called guides. Guided insertion/deletion considers matching of a string and a guide with respect...

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Main Authors: E.P. de Vink, H. Zantema, D. Bošnački
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iasi 2013-06-01
Series:Scientific Annals of Computer Science
Online Access:http://www.info.uaic.ro/bin/download/Annals/XXIII1/XXIII1_1.pdf
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spelling doaj-56b322cf803c4fce9866803f128ac6a62020-11-25T02:17:07ZengAlexandru Ioan Cuza University of IasiScientific Annals of Computer Science1843-81212248-26952013-06-01XXIII1397310.7561/SACS.2013.1.39RNA-Editing with Combined Insertion and Deletion Preserves RegularityE.P. de VinkH. ZantemaD. BošnačkiWe consider two elementary forms of string rewriting called guided insertion/deletion and guided rewriting. The original strings are modified depending on the match with a given set of auxiliary strings, called guides. Guided insertion/deletion considers matching of a string and a guide with respect to a specific correspondence of strings. Guided rewriting considers matching of a string and a guide with respect to an equivalence relation on the alphabet. Guided insertion/deletion is inspired by {RNA}-editing, a biological process by which the original genetic information stored in DNA is modified before its final expression. The formalism here allows for simultaneous insertion and deletion of string elements. Guided rewriting, based on a letter-to-letter relation, is technically more appealing than guided insertion/deletion. We prove that guided rewriting preserves regularity: for every regular language its closure under guided rewriting is regular too. In the proof we will rely on the auxiliary notion of a slice sequence. We establish a correspondence of slice sequences and guide rewrite sequences. Because of their left-to-right nature, slice sequences are more convenient to deal with than guided rewrite sequences in the construction of the finite automata that we encounter in the proofs of regularity. Based on the result for guided rewriting we establish that guided insertion/deletion preserves regularity as well.http://www.info.uaic.ro/bin/download/Annals/XXIII1/XXIII1_1.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author E.P. de Vink
H. Zantema
D. Bošnački
spellingShingle E.P. de Vink
H. Zantema
D. Bošnački
RNA-Editing with Combined Insertion and Deletion Preserves Regularity
Scientific Annals of Computer Science
author_facet E.P. de Vink
H. Zantema
D. Bošnački
author_sort E.P. de Vink
title RNA-Editing with Combined Insertion and Deletion Preserves Regularity
title_short RNA-Editing with Combined Insertion and Deletion Preserves Regularity
title_full RNA-Editing with Combined Insertion and Deletion Preserves Regularity
title_fullStr RNA-Editing with Combined Insertion and Deletion Preserves Regularity
title_full_unstemmed RNA-Editing with Combined Insertion and Deletion Preserves Regularity
title_sort rna-editing with combined insertion and deletion preserves regularity
publisher Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iasi
series Scientific Annals of Computer Science
issn 1843-8121
2248-2695
publishDate 2013-06-01
description We consider two elementary forms of string rewriting called guided insertion/deletion and guided rewriting. The original strings are modified depending on the match with a given set of auxiliary strings, called guides. Guided insertion/deletion considers matching of a string and a guide with respect to a specific correspondence of strings. Guided rewriting considers matching of a string and a guide with respect to an equivalence relation on the alphabet. Guided insertion/deletion is inspired by {RNA}-editing, a biological process by which the original genetic information stored in DNA is modified before its final expression. The formalism here allows for simultaneous insertion and deletion of string elements. Guided rewriting, based on a letter-to-letter relation, is technically more appealing than guided insertion/deletion. We prove that guided rewriting preserves regularity: for every regular language its closure under guided rewriting is regular too. In the proof we will rely on the auxiliary notion of a slice sequence. We establish a correspondence of slice sequences and guide rewrite sequences. Because of their left-to-right nature, slice sequences are more convenient to deal with than guided rewrite sequences in the construction of the finite automata that we encounter in the proofs of regularity. Based on the result for guided rewriting we establish that guided insertion/deletion preserves regularity as well.
url http://www.info.uaic.ro/bin/download/Annals/XXIII1/XXIII1_1.pdf
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