36 research outputs found

    Inductive Definition and Domain Theoretic Properties of Fully Abstract

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    A construction of fully abstract typed models for PCF and PCF^+ (i.e., PCF + "parallel conditional function"), respectively, is presented. It is based on general notions of sequential computational strategies and wittingly consistent non-deterministic strategies introduced by the author in the seventies. Although these notions of strategies are old, the definition of the fully abstract models is new, in that it is given level-by-level in the finite type hierarchy. To prove full abstraction and non-dcpo domain theoretic properties of these models, a theory of computational strategies is developed. This is also an alternative and, in a sense, an analogue to the later game strategy semantics approaches of Abramsky, Jagadeesan, and Malacaria; Hyland and Ong; and Nickau. In both cases of PCF and PCF^+ there are definable universal (surjective) functionals from numerical functions to any given type, respectively, which also makes each of these models unique up to isomorphism. Although such models are non-omega-complete and therefore not continuous in the traditional terminology, they are also proved to be sequentially complete (a weakened form of omega-completeness), "naturally" continuous (with respect to existing directed "pointwise", or "natural" lubs) and also "naturally" omega-algebraic and "naturally" bounded complete -- appropriate generalisation of the ordinary notions of domain theory to the case of non-dcpos.Comment: 50 page

    Compactly Generated Domain Theory

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    The extensional ordering of the sequential functionals

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    AbstractWe investigate the extensional ordering of the sequential functionals of finite types, with a focus on when the sequential functionals of a given type form a directed complete partial ordering, and on when a finite sequential functional will be the nontrivial least upper bound of an infinite chain of sequential functionals. We offer a full characterization for finite functionals of pure types

    Towards a Convenient Category of Topological Domains

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    We propose a category of topological spaces that promises to be convenient for the purposes of domain theory as a mathematical theory for modelling computation. Our notion of convenience presupposes the usual properties of domain theory, e.g. modelling the basic type constructors, fixed points, recursive types, etc. In addition, we seek to model parametric polymorphism, and also to provide a flexible toolkit for modelling computational effects as free algebras for algebraic theories. Our convenient category is obtained as an application of recent work on the remarkable closure conditions of the category of quotients of countably-based topological spaces. Its convenience is a consequence of a connection with realizability models

    A Convenient Category of Domains

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    We motivate and define a category of "topological domains", whose objects are certain topological spaces, generalising the usual omegaomega-continuous dcppos of domain theory. Our category supports all the standard constructions of domain theory, including the solution of recursive domain equations. It also supports the construction of free algebras for (in)equational theories, provides a model of parametric polymorphism, and can be used as the basis for a theory of computability. This answers a question of Gordon Plotkin, who asked whether it was possible to construct a category of domains combining such properties

    Computable concurrent processes

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    AbstractWe study relative computability for processes and process transformations, in general, and in particular the non-deterministic and concurrent processes which can be specified in terms of various fair merge constructs. The main result is a normal form theorem for these (relatively) computable process functions which implies that although they can be very complex when viewed as classical set-functions, they are all “loosely implementable” in the sense of Park (1980). The precise results are about the player model of concurrency introduced in Moschovakis (1991), which supports both fairness constructs and full recursion

    A rich hierarchy of functionals of finite types

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    We are considering typed hierarchies of total, continuous functionals using complete, separable metric spaces at the base types. We pay special attention to the so called Urysohn space constructed by P. Urysohn. One of the properties of the Urysohn space is that every other separable metric space can be isometrically embedded into it. We discuss why the Urysohn space may be considered as the universal model of possibly infinitary outputs of algorithms. The main result is that all our typed hierarchies may be topologically embedded, type by type, into the corresponding hierarchy over the Urysohn space. As a preparation for this, we prove an effective density theorem that is also of independent interest.Comment: 21 page

    Tensor products and regularity properties of Cuntz semigroups

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    The Cuntz semigroup of a C*-algebra is an important invariant in the structure and classification theory of C*-algebras. It captures more information than K-theory but is often more delicate to handle. We systematically study the lattice and category theoretic aspects of Cuntz semigroups. Given a C*-algebra AA, its (concrete) Cuntz semigroup Cu(A)Cu(A) is an object in the category CuCu of (abstract) Cuntz semigroups, as introduced by Coward, Elliott and Ivanescu. To clarify the distinction between concrete and abstract Cuntz semigroups, we will call the latter CuCu-semigroups. We establish the existence of tensor products in the category CuCu and study the basic properties of this construction. We show that CuCu is a symmetric, monoidal category and relate Cu(AB)Cu(A\otimes B) with Cu(A)CuCu(B)Cu(A)\otimes_{Cu}Cu(B) for certain classes of C*-algebras. As a main tool for our approach we introduce the category WW of pre-completed Cuntz semigroups. We show that CuCu is a full, reflective subcategory of WW. One can then easily deduce properties of CuCu from respective properties of WW, e.g. the existence of tensor products and inductive limits. The advantage is that constructions in WW are much easier since the objects are purely algebraic. We also develop a theory of CuCu-semirings and their semimodules. The Cuntz semigroup of a strongly self-absorbing C*-algebra has a natural product giving it the structure of a CuCu-semiring. We give explicit characterizations of CuCu-semimodules over such CuCu-semirings. For instance, we show that a CuCu-semigroup SS tensorially absorbs the CuCu-semiring of the Jiang-Su algebra if and only if SS is almost unperforated and almost divisible, thus establishing a semigroup version of the Toms-Winter conjecture.Comment: 195 pages; revised version; several proofs streamlined; some results corrected, in particular added 5.2.3-5.2.
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