1,157 research outputs found
Lean and Full Congruence Formats for Recursion
In this paper I distinguish two (pre)congruence requirements for semantic
equivalences and preorders on processes given as closed terms in a system
description language with a recursion construct. A lean congruence preserves
equivalence when replacing closed subexpressions of a process by equivalent
alternatives. A full congruence moreover allows replacement within a recursive
specification of subexpressions that may contain recursion variables bound
outside of these subexpressions.
I establish that bisimilarity is a lean (pre)congruence for recursion for all
languages with a structural operational semantics in the ntyft/ntyxt format.
Additionally, it is a full congruence for the tyft/tyxt format.Comment: To appear in: Proc. LICS'17, Reykjavik, Iceland, IEE
Musings on Encodings and Expressiveness
This paper proposes a definition of what it means for one system description
language to encode another one, thereby enabling an ordering of system
description languages with respect to expressive power. I compare the proposed
definition with other definitions of encoding and expressiveness found in the
literature, and illustrate it on a case study: comparing the expressive power
of CCS and CSP.Comment: In Proceedings EXPRESS/SOS 2012, arXiv:1208.244
Axiomatizing Flat Iteration
Flat iteration is a variation on the original binary version of the Kleene
star operation P*Q, obtained by restricting the first argument to be a sum of
atomic actions. It generalizes prefix iteration, in which the first argument is
a single action. Complete finite equational axiomatizations are given for five
notions of bisimulation congruence over basic CCS with flat iteration, viz.
strong congruence, branching congruence, eta-congruence, delay congruence and
weak congruence. Such axiomatizations were already known for prefix iteration
and are known not to exist for general iteration. The use of flat iteration has
two main advantages over prefix iteration: 1.The current axiomatizations
generalize to full CCS, whereas the prefix iteration approach does not allow an
elimination theorem for an asynchronous parallel composition operator. 2.The
greater expressiveness of flat iteration allows for much shorter completeness
proofs.
In the setting of prefix iteration, the most convenient way to obtain the
completeness theorems for eta-, delay, and weak congruence was by reduction to
the completeness theorem for branching congruence. In the case of weak
congruence this turned out to be much simpler than the only direct proof found.
In the setting of flat iteration on the other hand, the completeness theorems
for delay and weak (but not eta-) congruence can equally well be obtained by
reduction to the one for strong congruence, without using branching congruence
as an intermediate step. Moreover, the completeness results for prefix
iteration can be retrieved from those for flat iteration, thus obtaining a
second indirect approach for proving completeness for delay and weak congruence
in the setting of prefix iteration.Comment: 15 pages. LaTeX 2.09. Filename: flat.tex.gz. On A4 paper print with:
dvips -t a4 -O -2.15cm,-2.22cm -x 1225 flat. For US letter with: dvips -t
letter -O -0.73in,-1.27in -x 1225 flat. More info at
http://theory.stanford.edu/~rvg/abstracts.html#3
Folk Theorems on the Correspondence between State-Based and Event-Based Systems
Kripke Structures and Labelled Transition Systems are the two most prominent
semantic models used in concurrency theory. Both models are commonly believed
to be equi-expressive. One can find many ad-hoc embeddings of one of these
models into the other. We build upon the seminal work of De Nicola and
Vaandrager that firmly established the correspondence between stuttering
equivalence in Kripke Structures and divergence-sensitive branching
bisimulation in Labelled Transition Systems. We show that their embeddings can
also be used for a range of other equivalences of interest, such as strong
bisimilarity, simulation equivalence, and trace equivalence. Furthermore, we
extend the results by De Nicola and Vaandrager by showing that there are
additional translations that allow one to use minimisation techniques in one
semantic domain to obtain minimal representatives in the other semantic domain
for these equivalences.Comment: Full version of SOFSEM 2011 pape
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