107 research outputs found
Revisiting bisimilarity and its modal logic for nondeterministic and probabilistic processes
We consider PML, the probabilistic version of Hennessy-Milner logic introduced by Larsen and Skou to characterize bisimilarity over probabilistic processes without internal
nondeterminism.We provide two different interpretations for PML by considering nondeterministic and probabilistic processes as models, and we exhibit two new bisimulation-based equivalences that are in full agreement with those interpretations. Our new equivalences include
as coarsest congruences the two bisimilarities for nondeterministic and probabilistic processes proposed by Segala and Lynch. The latter equivalences are instead in agreement with two versions of Hennessy-Milner logic extended with an additional probabilistic operator
interpreted over state distributions rather than over individual states. Thus, our new interpretations of PML and the corresponding new bisimilarities offer a uniform framework for reasoning on processes that are purely nondeterministic or reactive probabilistic or are mixing nondeterminism and probability in an alternating/non-alternating way
On Observing Dynamic Prioritised Actions in SOC
We study the impact on observational semantics for SOC of priority mechanisms which combine dynamic priority with local pre-emption. We define manageable notions of strong and weak labelled bisimilarities for COWS, a process calculus for SOC, and provide alternative characterisations in terms of open barbed bisimilarities. These semantics show that COWS’s priority mechanisms partially recover the capability to observe receive actions (that could not be observed in a purely asynchronous setting) and that high priority primitives for termination impose specific conditions on the bisimilarities
Branching Bisimilarity on Normed BPA Is EXPTIME-complete
We put forward an exponential-time algorithm for deciding branching
bisimilarity on normed BPA (Bacis Process Algebra) systems. The decidability of
branching (or weak) bisimilarity on normed BPA was once a long standing open
problem which was closed by Yuxi Fu. The EXPTIME-hardness is an inference of a
slight modification of the reduction presented by Richard Mayr. Our result
claims that this problem is EXPTIME-complete.Comment: We correct many typing errors, add several remarks and an interesting
toy exampl
A Logic for True Concurrency
We propose a logic for true concurrency whose formulae predicate about events
in computations and their causal dependencies. The induced logical equivalence
is hereditary history preserving bisimilarity, and fragments of the logic can
be identified which correspond to other true concurrent behavioural
equivalences in the literature: step, pomset and history preserving
bisimilarity. Standard Hennessy-Milner logic, and thus (interleaving)
bisimilarity, is also recovered as a fragment. We also propose an extension of
the logic with fixpoint operators, thus allowing to describe causal and
concurrency properties of infinite computations. We believe that this work
contributes to a rational presentation of the true concurrent spectrum and to a
deeper understanding of the relations between the involved behavioural
equivalences.Comment: 31 pages, a preliminary version appeared in CONCUR 201
Characteristic Bisimulation for Higher-Order Session Processes
Characterising contextual equivalence is a long-standing issue for higher-order (process) languages. In the setting of a higher-order pi-calculus with sessions, we develop characteristic bisimilarity, a typed bisimilarity which fully characterises contextual equivalence. To our knowledge, ours is the first characterisation of its kind. Using simple values inhabiting (session) types, our approach distinguishes from untyped methods for characterising contextual equivalence in higher-order processes: we show that observing as inputs only a precise finite set of higher-order values suffices to reason about higher-order session processes. We demonstrate how characteristic bisimilarity can be used to justify optimisations in session protocols with mobile code communication
Expected-Delay-Summing Weak Bisimilarity for Markov Automata
A new weak bisimulation semantics is defined for Markov automata that, in
addition to abstracting from internal actions, sums up the expected values of
consecutive exponentially distributed delays possibly intertwined with internal
actions. The resulting equivalence is shown to be a congruence with respect to
parallel composition for Markov automata. Moreover, it turns out to be
comparable with weak bisimilarity for timed labeled transition systems, thus
constituting a step towards reconciling the semantics for stochastic time and
deterministic time.Comment: In Proceedings QAPL 2015, arXiv:1509.0816
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