Introduction to the Theory of Finite-State Machines By Arthur Gill
Publisher: M.c.Gr.aw-H.ill 1962 | 216 Pages | ISBN: 0070232431 | DJVU | 3 MB
Publisher: M.c.Gr.aw-H.ill 1962 | 216 Pages | ISBN: 0070232431 | DJVU | 3 MB
Recent years have witnessed the rapid emergence of a ne\v scientific discipline, commonly kno".n as system theory. The advent of this discipline ,vas largely motivated by the acute need for a theoretical framework within which investigators of different fields of science and engineering could find a common language. The aim of this theory was to build up an arsenal of ideas and tools which \vould be of equal usefulness to specialists in a wide variety of fields, such as electrical engineering, mechanical engineering, physiology, and linguistics. This was achieved by viewing a system (which could be a living organism, an industrial establishment, a guided missile) not via its internal structure, but through the mathematical laws which govern its observable behavior. Employing this "black-box" approach, it ,vas found that systems exhibiting completely dissimilar physical compositions could still be characterized in similar terms and analyzed through the same set of rules.