53 research outputs found

    Probabilistic modal {\mu}-calculus with independent product

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    The probabilistic modal {\mu}-calculus is a fixed-point logic designed for expressing properties of probabilistic labeled transition systems (PLTS's). Two equivalent semantics have been studied for this logic, both assigning to each state a value in the interval [0,1] representing the probability that the property expressed by the formula holds at the state. One semantics is denotational and the other is a game semantics, specified in terms of two-player stochastic parity games. A shortcoming of the probabilistic modal {\mu}-calculus is the lack of expressiveness required to encode other important temporal logics for PLTS's such as Probabilistic Computation Tree Logic (PCTL). To address this limitation we extend the logic with a new pair of operators: independent product and coproduct. The resulting logic, called probabilistic modal {\mu}-calculus with independent product, can encode many properties of interest and subsumes the qualitative fragment of PCTL. The main contribution of this paper is the definition of an appropriate game semantics for this extended probabilistic {\mu}-calculus. This relies on the definition of a new class of games which generalize standard two-player stochastic (parity) games by allowing a play to be split into concurrent subplays, each continuing their evolution independently. Our main technical result is the equivalence of the two semantics. The proof is carried out in ZFC set theory extended with Martin's Axiom at an uncountable cardinal

    On the Problem of Computing the Probability of Regular Sets of Trees

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    We consider the problem of computing the probability of regular languages of infinite trees with respect to the natural coin-flipping measure. We propose an algorithm which computes the probability of languages recognizable by \emph{game automata}. In particular this algorithm is applicable to all deterministic automata. We then use the algorithm to prove through examples three properties of measure: (1) there exist regular sets having irrational probability, (2) there exist comeager regular sets having probability 00 and (3) the probability of \emph{game languages} Wi,kW_{i,k}, from automata theory, is 00 if kk is odd and is 11 otherwise

    Lukasiewicz mu-Calculus

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    We consider state-based systems modelled as coalgebras whose type incorporates branching, and show that by suitably adapting the definition of coalgebraic bisimulation, one obtains a general and uniform account of the linear-time behaviour of a state in such a coalgebra. By moving away from a boolean universe of truth values, our approach can measure the extent to which a state in a system with branching is able to exhibit a particular linear-time behaviour. This instantiates to measuring the probability of a specific behaviour occurring in a probabilistic system, or measuring the minimal cost of exhibiting a specific behaviour in the case of weighted computations

    Monads and Quantitative Equational Theories for Nondeterminism and Probability

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    The monad of convex sets of probability distributions is a well-known tool for modelling the combination of nondeterministic and probabilistic computational effects. In this work we lift this monad from the category of sets to the category of extended metric spaces, by means of the Hausdorff and Kantorovich metric liftings. Our main result is the presentation of this lifted monad in terms of the quantitative equational theory of convex semilattices, using the framework of quantitative algebras recently introduced by Mardare, Panangaden and Plotkin

    Probabilistic logics based on Riesz spaces

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    We introduce a novel real-valued endogenous logic for expressing properties of probabilistic transition systems called Riesz modal logic. The design of the syntax and semantics of this logic is directly inspired by the theory of Riesz spaces, a mature field of mathematics at the intersection of universal algebra and functional analysis. By using powerful results from this theory, we develop the duality theory of the Riesz modal logic in the form of an algebra-to-coalgebra correspondence. This has a number of consequences including: a sound and complete axiomatization, the proof that the logic characterizes probabilistic bisimulation and other convenient results such as completion theorems. This work is intended to be the basis for subsequent research on extensions of Riesz modal logic with fixed-point operators

    Game semantics for probabilistic modal Ό-calculi

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    The probabilistic (or quantitative) modal ÎŒ-calculus is a fixed-point logic designed for expressing properties of probabilistic labeled transition systems (PLTS’s). Two semantics have been studied for this logic, both assigning to every process state a value in the interval [0, 1] representing the probability that the property expressed by the formula holds at the state. One semantics is denotational and the other is a game semantics, specified in terms of two-player stochastic games. The two semantics have been proved to coincide on all finite PLTS’s. A first contribution of the thesis is to extend this coincidence result to arbitrary PLTS’s. A shortcoming of the probabilistic ÎŒ-calculus is the lack of expressiveness required to encode other important temporal logics for PLTS’s such as Probabilistic Computation Tree Logic (PCTL). To address this limitation, we extend the logic with a new pair of operators: independent product and coproduct, and we show that the resulting logic can encode the qualitative fragment of PCTL. Moreover, a further extension of the logic, with the operation of truncated sum and its dual, is expressive enough to encode full PCTL. A major contribution of the thesis is the definition of appropriate game semantics for these extended probabilistic ÎŒ-calculi. This relies on the definition of a new class of games, called tree games, which generalize standard 2-player stochastic games. In tree games, a play can be split into concurrent subplays which continue their evolution independently. Surprisingly, this simple device supports the encoding of the whole class of imperfect-information games known as Blackwell games. Moreover, interesting open problems in game theory, such as qualitative determinacy for 2-player stochastic parity games, can be reformulated as determinacy problems for suitable classes of tree games. Our main technical result about tree games is a proof of determinacy for 2-player stochastic metaparity games, which is the class of tree games that we use to give game semantics to the extended probabilistic ÎŒ-calculi. In order to cope with measure-theoretic technicalities, the proof is carried out in ZFC set theory extended with Martin’s Axiom at the first uncountable cardinal (MAâ„”1). The final result of the thesis shows that the game semantics of the extended logics coincides with the denotational semantics, for arbitrary PLTS’s. However, in contrast to the earlier coincidence result, which is proved in ZFC, the proof of coincidence for the extended calculi is once again carried out in ZFC +MAâ„”1

    Universal Quantitative Algebra for Fuzzy Relations and Generalised Metric Spaces

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    We present a generalisation of the theory of quantitative algebras of Mardare, Panangaden and Plotkin where (i) the carriers of quantitative algebras are not restricted to be metric spaces and can be arbitrary fuzzy relations or generalised metric spaces, and (ii) the interpretations of the algebraic operations are not required to be nonexpansive. Our main results include: a novel sound and complete proof system, the proof that free quantitative algebras always exist, the proof of strict monadicity of the induced Free-Forgetful adjunction, the result that all monads (on fuzzy relations) that lift finitary monads (on sets) admit a quantitative equational presentation.Comment: Appendix remove

    PicNIc - Pi-calculus Non-Interference checker

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    PICNIC is a tool for verifying security properties of systems, namely non-interference properties of processes expressed as terms of the pi-calculus with two security levels and declassification primitives. More precisely, it checks whether inserting a process into two different high contexts no information leakage to the low level observers occurs. These properties are decidable over finite control processes, but decidability can be extended by compositionality also to some infinite state processes. Notably, PICNIC has been developed in Fresh OpsilaCaML, a dialect of CaML with native support for binders and fresh/local names; thus, this work can be seen also as a non-trivial case study about the applicability of these new programming languages
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