A finite automaton, simply referred to as a robot, has to explore a graph, i.e., visit all the nodes of the graph. The robot has no a priori knowledge of the topology of the graph or of its size. It is known that, for any k-state robot, there exists a (k+1)-node graph of maximum degree 3 that the robot cannot explore. This paper considers the effects of allowing the system designer to add short labels to the graph nodes in a preprocessing stage, and using these labels to guide the exploration by the robot. We describe an exploration algorithm that given appropriate 2-bit labels (in fact, only 3-valued labels) allows a robot to explore all graphs. Furthermore, we describe a suitable labeling algorithm for generating the required labels, in linear time. We also show how to modify our labeling scheme so that a robot can explore all graphs of bounded degree, given appropriate 1-bit labels. In other words, although there is no robot able to explore all graphs of maximum degree 3, there is a robot R, and a way to color in black or white the nodes of any bounded-degree graph G, so that R. can explore the colored graph G. Finally, we give impossibility results regarding graph exploration by a robot with no internal memory (i.e., a single state automaton). © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2005.
CITATION STYLE
Cohen, R., Fraigniaud, P., Ilcinkas, D., Korman, A., & Peleg, D. (2005). Label-guided graph exploration by a finite automaton. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (Vol. 3580, pp. 335–346). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/11523468_28
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