In formal language theory, many families of languages are defined
using either grammars or finite acceptors. For instance,
context-sensitive languages are the languages generated by growing
grammars, or equivalently those accepted by Turing machines whose
work tape's size is proportional to that of their input. A few years
ago, a new characterisation of context-sensitive languages as the
sets of traces, or path labels, of rational graphs (infinite graphs
defined by sets of finite-state transducers) was established. We
investigate a similar characterisation in the more general framework
of graphs defined by term transducers. In particular, we show that
the languages of term-automatic graphs between regular sets of
vertices coincide with the languages accepted by alternating
linearly bounded Turing machines.
As a technical tool, we also introduce an arborescent variant of
tiling systems, which provides yet another characterisation of these
languages.