Category theory has been successfully employed to structure the confusing setup of models and equivalences for concurrency: Winskel and Nielsen have related the standard models via adjunctions and (co)reflections while Joyal et al. have defined an abstract notion of equivalence, known as open map bisimilarity. One model has not been integrated into this framework: the causal trees of Darondeau and Degano. Here we fill this gap. In particular, we show that there is an adjunction from causal trees to event structures, which we bring to light via a mediating model, that of event trees. Further, we achieve an open map characterization of history preserving bisimilarity: the latter is captured by the natural instantiation of the abstract bisimil...
AbstractOpen maps, as introduced in concurrency theory by Joyal, Nielsen and Winskel, provide an abs...
AbstractEvent structures have come to play an important role in the formal study of the behaviour of...
Causality appears in various contexts as a property where present behaviour can only depend on past ...
AbstractCategory theory has been successfully employed to structure the confusing set-up of models a...
AbstractCategory theory has been successfully employed to structure the confusing setup of models an...
AbstractRefinement of actions allows one to design systems in a top-down style, changing the level o...
We suggest an equivalence notion for event structures as a semantic model of concurrent systems. It ...
We propose a logic for true concurrency whose formulae predicate about events in computations and th...
Causal trees are one of the earliest pioneering contributions of Pierpaolo Degano, in joint work wit...
Event structures are one of the best known models for concurrency. Many variants of the basic model ...
Event structures are one of the best known models for concurrency. Many variants of the basic model ...
Event structures represent concurrent processes in terms of events and dependency relations between ...
We study some logics for true concurrency recently defined by several authors to characterise a numb...
Open maps, as introduced in concurrency theory by Joyal, Nielsen and Winskel, provide an abstract wa...
Based on a simple axiomatization of concurrent behaviour we define two ways of observing parallel co...
AbstractOpen maps, as introduced in concurrency theory by Joyal, Nielsen and Winskel, provide an abs...
AbstractEvent structures have come to play an important role in the formal study of the behaviour of...
Causality appears in various contexts as a property where present behaviour can only depend on past ...
AbstractCategory theory has been successfully employed to structure the confusing set-up of models a...
AbstractCategory theory has been successfully employed to structure the confusing setup of models an...
AbstractRefinement of actions allows one to design systems in a top-down style, changing the level o...
We suggest an equivalence notion for event structures as a semantic model of concurrent systems. It ...
We propose a logic for true concurrency whose formulae predicate about events in computations and th...
Causal trees are one of the earliest pioneering contributions of Pierpaolo Degano, in joint work wit...
Event structures are one of the best known models for concurrency. Many variants of the basic model ...
Event structures are one of the best known models for concurrency. Many variants of the basic model ...
Event structures represent concurrent processes in terms of events and dependency relations between ...
We study some logics for true concurrency recently defined by several authors to characterise a numb...
Open maps, as introduced in concurrency theory by Joyal, Nielsen and Winskel, provide an abstract wa...
Based on a simple axiomatization of concurrent behaviour we define two ways of observing parallel co...
AbstractOpen maps, as introduced in concurrency theory by Joyal, Nielsen and Winskel, provide an abs...
AbstractEvent structures have come to play an important role in the formal study of the behaviour of...
Causality appears in various contexts as a property where present behaviour can only depend on past ...