M. Cesati, M. Di Ianni, ``Computation Models for Parameterized Complexity'', Mathematical Logic Quarterly, 43 (1997), 179-202, Johann Ambrosius Barth

A parameterized computational problem is a set of pairs (x,k), where k is a distinguished item called ``parameter''. FPT is the class of fixed-parameter tractable problems: for any fixed value k, they are solvable in time bounded by a polynomial of degree c, where c is a constant not dependent on the parameter. In order to deal with parameterized intractability, Downey and Fellows have introduced a hierarchy of classes W[1] \subseteq W[2] \subseteq ... containing likely intractable parameterized problems, and they have shown that such classes have many natural, complete languages. In this paper we analyze several variations of the halting problem for nondeterministic Turing machines with parameterized time, and we show that its parameterized complexity strongly depends on some resources like the number of tapes, heads and internal states, and on the size of the alphabet. Notice that classical polynomial-time complexity fails in distinguishing such features. As byproducts, we show that parameterized complexity is a useful tool for the study of the intrinsic power of some computational models, and we underline the different ``computational powers'' of some levels of the parameterized hierarchy.


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