Abstract. Two-player zero-sum games are a well-established model for synthesising controllers that optimise some performance criterion. In such games one player represents the controller, while the other describes the (adversarial) environment, and controller synthesis corresponds to computing the optimal strategies of the controller for a given criterion. Asarin and Maler initiated the study of quantitative games on (non-probabilistic) timed automata by synthesising controllers which optimise the time to reach a final state. The correctness and termination of their approach was dependent on exploiting the properties of a special class of functions, called simple functions, that can be finitely represented. In this paper we consider quantitative games over probabilistic timed automata. Since the concept of simple functions is not sufficient to solve games in this setting, we generalise simple functions to so-called quasi-simple functions. Then, using this class of functions, we demonst...
Marta Z. Kwiatkowska, Gethin Norman, Ashutosh Triv