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Complexity of intuitionistic and Visser's basic and formal logics in finitely many variables

In Marcus Kracht, Maarten de Rijke, Heinrich Wansing & Michael Zakharyaschev (eds.), Advances in Modal Logic. CSLI Publications. pp. 393-411 (1998)

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  1. Complexity of intuitionistic propositional logic and its fragments.Mikhail Rybakov - 2008 - Journal of Applied Non-Classical Logics 18 (2):267-292.
    In the paper we consider complexity of intuitionistic propositional logic and its natural fragments such as implicative fragment, finite-variable fragments, and some others. Most facts we mention here are known and obtained by logicians from different countries and in different time since 1920s; we present these results together to see the whole picture.
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  • Complexity of finite-variable fragments of EXPTIME-complete logics ★.Mikhail Rybakov - 2007 - Journal of Applied Non-Classical Logics 17 (3):359-382.
    The main result of the present paper is that the variable-free fragment of logic K*, the logic with a single K-style modality and its “reflexive and transitive closure,” is EXPTIMEcomplete. It is then shown that this immediately gives EXPTIME-completeness of variable-free fragments of a number of known EXPTIME-complete logics. Our proof contains a general idea of how to construct a polynomial-time reduction of a propositional logic to its n-variable—and even, in the cases of K*, PDL, CTL, ATL, and some others, (...)
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  • Transitive primal infon logic.Carlos Cotrini & Yuri Gurevich - 2013 - Review of Symbolic Logic 6 (2):281-304.
    Primal infon logic was introduced in 2009 in connection with access control. In addition to traditional logic constructs, it contains unary connectives p said indispensable in the intended access control applications. Propositional primal infon logic is decidable in linear time, yet suffices for many common access control scenarios. The most obvious limitation on its expressivity is the failure of the transitivity law for implication: \$$ \to \$$ and \$$ \to \$$ do not necessarily yield \$$ \to \$$. Here we introduce (...)
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