10,577 research outputs found
On the Expressiveness of Intensional Communication
The expressiveness of communication primitives has been explored in a common
framework based on the pi-calculus by considering four features: synchronism
(asynchronous vs synchronous), arity (monadic vs polyadic data), communication
medium (shared dataspaces vs channel-based), and pattern-matching (binding to a
name vs testing name equality). Here pattern-matching is generalised to account
for terms with internal structure such as in recent calculi like Spi calculi,
Concurrent Pattern Calculus and Psi calculi. This paper explores intensionality
upon terms, in particular communication primitives that can match upon both
names and structures. By means of possibility/impossibility of encodings, this
paper shows that intensionality alone can encode synchronism, arity,
communication-medium, and pattern-matching, yet no combination of these without
intensionality can encode any intensional language.Comment: In Proceedings EXPRESS/SOS 2014, arXiv:1408.127
On the Expressiveness of Joining
The expressiveness of communication primitives has been explored in a common
framework based on the pi-calculus by considering four features: synchronism
(asynchronous vs synchronous), arity (monadic vs polyadic data), communication
medium (shared dataspaces vs channel-based), and pattern-matching (binding to a
name vs testing name equality vs intensionality). Here another dimension
coordination is considered that accounts for the number of processes required
for an interaction to occur. Coordination generalises binary languages such as
pi-calculus to joining languages that combine inputs such as the Join Calculus
and general rendezvous calculus. By means of possibility/impossibility of
encodings, this paper shows coordination is unrelated to the other features.
That is, joining languages are more expressive than binary languages, and no
combination of the other features can encode a joining language into a binary
language. Further, joining is not able to encode any of the other features
unless they could be encoded otherwise.Comment: In Proceedings ICE 2015, arXiv:1508.04595. arXiv admin note:
substantial text overlap with arXiv:1408.145
On the utility of the concepts of markedness and prototypes in understanding the development of morphological systems
In attempting to understand the history of the morphology of a language or group of languages, we occasionally face a problem of isomorphy, where two or more semantic categories evince the same formal marking. We then must decide which use of that particular form of marking is the oldest, and also determine the possible source and path of development of the marking. In languages with written documents of great time depth this is often not a problem, but in unwritten languages it can be quite difficult. This paper discusses two tools that can be used for this purpose: the concepts of markedness and prototypes
Exclamative clauses at the syntax-semantics interface
Exclamative clauses exhibit a structural diversity which raises the question of whether they form a clause type in the sense of Sadock & Zwicky (1985). Based on data from English, Italian, and Paduan, we argue that the class of exclamatives is syntactically characterizable in terms of a pair of abstract syntactic properties. Moreover, we propose that these properties encode two components of meaning which uniquely define the semantics and pragmatics of exclarnatives. Overall, our paper is a contribution to the study of the syntaxlsemantics interface and offers a new perspective on the notion of clause type
Proceedings of International Workshop "Global Computing: Programming Environments, Languages, Security and Analysis of Systems"
According to the IST/ FET proactive initiative on GLOBAL COMPUTING, the goal is to obtain techniques (models, frameworks, methods, algorithms) for constructing systems that are flexible, dependable, secure, robust and efficient.
The dominant concerns are not those of representing and manipulating data efficiently but rather those of handling the co-ordination and interaction, security, reliability, robustness, failure modes, and control of risk of the entities in the system and the overall design, description and performance of the system itself.
Completely different paradigms of computer science may have to be developed to tackle these issues effectively. The research should concentrate on systems having the following characteristics: • The systems are composed of autonomous computational entities where activity is not centrally controlled, either because global control is impossible or impractical, or because the entities are created or controlled by different owners.
• The computational entities are mobile, due to the movement of the physical platforms or by movement of the entity from one platform to another.
• The configuration varies over time. For instance, the system is open to the introduction of new computational entities and likewise their deletion.
The behaviour of the entities may vary over time.
• The systems operate with incomplete information about the environment.
For instance, information becomes rapidly out of date and mobility requires information about the environment to be discovered.
The ultimate goal of the research action is to provide a solid scientific foundation for the design of such systems, and to lay the groundwork for achieving effective principles for building and analysing such systems.
This workshop covers the aspects related to languages and programming environments as well as analysis of systems and resources involving 9 projects (AGILE , DART, DEGAS , MIKADO, MRG, MYTHS, PEPITO, PROFUNDIS, SECURE) out of the 13 founded under the initiative. After an year from the start of the projects, the goal of the workshop is to fix the state of the art on the topics covered by the two clusters related to programming environments and analysis of systems as well as to devise strategies and new ideas to profitably continue the research effort towards the overall objective of the initiative.
We acknowledge the Dipartimento di Informatica and Tlc of the University of Trento, the Comune di Rovereto, the project DEGAS for partially funding the event and the Events and Meetings Office of the University of Trento for the valuable collaboration
A Case Study in Coordination Programming: Performance Evaluation of S-Net vs Intel's Concurrent Collections
We present a programming methodology and runtime performance case study
comparing the declarative data flow coordination language S-Net with Intel's
Concurrent Collections (CnC). As a coordination language S-Net achieves a
near-complete separation of concerns between sequential software components
implemented in a separate algorithmic language and their parallel orchestration
in an asynchronous data flow streaming network. We investigate the merits of
S-Net and CnC with the help of a relevant and non-trivial linear algebra
problem: tiled Cholesky decomposition. We describe two alternative S-Net
implementations of tiled Cholesky factorization and compare them with two CnC
implementations, one with explicit performance tuning and one without, that
have previously been used to illustrate Intel CnC. Our experiments on a 48-core
machine demonstrate that S-Net manages to outperform CnC on this problem.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, 1 table, accepted for PLC 2014 worksho
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