Uniformity is weaker than semi-uniformity for some membrane systems
Niall Murphy, Damien Woods

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that for membrane systems, uniformity is strictly weaker than semi-uniformity, resolving an open problem and comparing their computational powers in relation to NL and unary languages.
Contribution
It proves that certain classes of uniform membrane systems are strictly weaker than semi-uniform classes, establishing a clear distinction between the two notions in this model.
Findings
Uniform membrane systems are strictly weaker than semi-uniform ones.
The results relate membrane system classes to NL and unary languages.
Resolves an open problem in membrane system theory.
Abstract
We investigate computing models that are presented as families of finite computing devices with a uniformity condition on the entire family. Examples of such models include Boolean circuits, membrane systems, DNA computers, chemical reaction networks and tile assembly systems, and there are many others. However, in such models there are actually two distinct kinds of uniformity condition. The first is the most common and well-understood, where each input length is mapped to a single computing device (e.g. a Boolean circuit) that computes on the finite set of inputs of that length. The second, called semi-uniformity, is where each input is mapped to a computing device for that input (e.g. a circuit with the input encoded as constants). The former notion is well-known and used in Boolean circuit complexity, while the latter notion is frequently found in literature on nature-inspired…
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