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Automata theory
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== Applications == Each model in automata theory plays important roles in several applied areas. [[Finite automata]] are used in [[text processing]], compilers, and [[hardware design]]. [[Context-free grammar]] (CFGs) are used in [[programming language specification|programming language]]s and artificial intelligence. Originally, CFGs were used in the study of [[natural language|human language]]s. [[Cellular automata]] are used in the field of [[artificial life]], the most famous example being [[John Horton Conway|John Conway]]'s [[Conway's Game of Life|Game of Life]]. Some other examples which could be explained using automata theory in biology include mollusk and pine cone growth and pigmentation patterns. Going further, a theory suggesting that the whole universe is computed by some sort of a discrete automaton, is advocated by some scientists. The idea originated in the work of [[Konrad Zuse]], and was popularized in America by [[Edward Fredkin]]. Automata also appear in the theory of [[finite field]]s: the set of [[irreducible polynomial]]s that can be written as composition of degree two polynomials is in fact a regular language.<ref>{{Citation | last1 = Ferraguti | first1 = A. | last2 = Micheli | first2 = G. | last3 = Schnyder | first3 = R. | title = Irreducible compositions of degree two polynomials over finite fields have regular structure | volume = 69 | issue = 3 | pages = 1089β1099 | series = The Quarterly Journal of Mathematics | publisher = Oxford University Press | doi = 10.1093/qmath/hay015 | year = 2018 | arxiv = 1701.06040 | s2cid = 3962424 }}</ref> Another problem for which automata can be used is the [[induction of regular languages]].
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