Regular sequences and synchronized sequences in abstract numeration systems
\'Emilie Charlier, C\'elia Cisternino, Manon Stipulanti

TL;DR
This paper introduces an alternative framework for defining and characterizing $\\mathcal{S}$-regular and $\\mathcal{S}$-synchronized sequences in abstract numeration systems, generalizing known properties and providing new methods for their analysis.
Contribution
It proposes a new definition of $\\mathcal{S}$-kernel, enabling broader characterizations of $\\mathcal{S}$-regular sequences using recognizable series, and explores properties of $\\mathcal{S}$-synchronized sequences.
Findings
New definition of $\\mathcal{S}$-kernel allows comprehensive characterizations.
Factor complexity of $\\mathcal{S}$-automatic sequences is $\\mathcal{S}$-regular if addition is recognizable.
Composition of $\\mathcal{S}$-synchronized and $\\mathcal{S}$-regular sequences remains $\\mathcal{S}$-regular.
Abstract
The notion of -regular sequences was generalized to abstract numeration systems by Maes and Rigo in 2002. Their definition is based on a notion of -kernel that extends that of -kernel. However, this definition does not allow us to generalize all of the many characterizations of -regular sequences. In this paper, we present an alternative definition of -kernel, and hence an alternative definition of -regular sequences, which enables us to use recognizable formal series in order to generalize most (if not all) known characterizations of -regular sequences to abstract numeration systems. We then give two characterizations of -automatic sequences as particular -regular sequences. Next, we present a general method to obtain various families of -regular sequences by enumerating -recognizable…
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