Work place: Department of Mathematics, College of Engineering and Technology, SRM Institute of Science and Technology, Kattankulathur-603203, Tamil Nadu, India
E-mail: r.aruljeeva@gmail.com
Website:
Research Interests:
Biography
Arulprakasam R. is currently serving as an Associate Professor in the Department of Mathematics at SRM Institute of Science and Technology, where he is actively involved in teaching undergraduate and postgraduate students, mentoring research scholars, and contributing to curriculum development in mathematics and computer science-related subjects. His primary research interests include formal language theory, automata theory, combinatorics on words. He has a strong academic record and has authored more than 38 research papers published in reputed peer-reviewed international journals and conference proceedings.
By Krishna Kumari R. Janaki K. Arulprakasam R.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5815/ijmecs.2026.03.11, Pub. Date: 8 Jun. 2026
The efficient allocation of finite resources to a dynamic patron base represents a core challenge in modern library management. Traditional heuristic approaches often lack the formal rigor needed for verifiable optimization and proactive planning. This paper introduces a novel formal framework grounded in automata theory to model library operations, patron behavior, and resource allocation strategies. We define a Library Resource Automaton (LRA), a deterministic finite automaton whose states represent distinct configurations of resource availability, whose input alphabet encapsulates patron interactions, and whose transition function formally encodes allocation policies. By interpreting sequences of patron actions as strings in a formal language, the LRA provides a computationally tractable and analytically powerful model for simulating library states, predicting bottlenecks, and synthesizing optimal allocation strategies. We elaborate on the theoretical foundations of the model, present a detailed multi-layer automata architecture for handling complex, multi-resource scenarios, and discuss algorithms for state space analysis and policy optimization. Furthermore, we explore the integration of temporal logic for specifying and verifying critical system properties such as fairness and liveness. This work establishes a rigorous bridge between theoretical computer science and library information science, offering a new paradigm for building predictable, efficient, and patron-centric library management systems.
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