Exploiting Asymmetry in Logic Puzzles: Using ZDDs for Symbolic Model Checking Dynamic Epistemic Logic

Daniel Miedema
(Bernoulli Institute, University of Groningen)
Malvin Gattinger
(ILLC, University of Amsterdam)

Binary decision diagrams (BDDs) are widely used to mitigate the state-explosion problem in model checking. A variation of BDDs are Zero-suppressed Decision Diagrams (ZDDs) which omit variables that must be false, instead of omitting variables that do not matter.

We use ZDDs to symbolically encode Kripke models used in Dynamic Epistemic Logic, a framework to reason about knowledge and information dynamics in multi-agent systems. We compare the memory usage of different ZDD variants for three well-known examples from the literature: the Muddy Children, the Sum and Product puzzle and the Dining Cryptographers. Our implementation is based on the existing model checker SMCDEL and the CUDD library.

Our results show that replacing BDDs with the right variant of ZDDs can significantly reduce memory usage. This suggests that ZDDs are a useful tool for model checking multi-agent systems.

In Rineke Verbrugge: Proceedings Nineteenth conference on Theoretical Aspects of Rationality and Knowledge (TARK 2023), Oxford, United Kingdom, 28-30th June 2023, Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science 379, pp. 407–420.
Published: 11th July 2023.

ArXived at: https://dx.doi.org/10.4204/EPTCS.379.32 bibtex PDF
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