A general framework proposed by Degano, De Nicola and Montanari has been fruitful to define in a natural way non interleaving semantics for process description languages based on causality. The framework relies on a decomposition function used to obtain the set of its sequential processes from a parallel term, and on a set of distributed transition rules carrying information about the actions processes can perform and their location. In this paper we show that also semantics discriminating according to space distribution of processes can be formulated in a natural way within this framework. Two new semantics are proposed. The first one is based on an alternative characterization of the locality equivalence of Boudol, Castellani, Hennessy an...
AbstractThe domain of partially terminated finite and infinite words is commonly used to give denota...
We propose a process algebra obtained by adapting the process algebra with continuous relative timi...
AbstractIn recent years several equivalences between nondeterministic and concurrent processes have ...
A new semantics for process description languages that discriminates according to the distribution i...
Abstract. This work studies the notion of locality in the context of process specication. It relates...
AbstractProcess algebra semantics can be categorised into noninterleaving semantics, where parallel ...
We study a notion of observation for concurrent processes which allows the observer to see the distr...
A methodology is introduced for defining truly concurrent semantics of processes as equivalence clas...
AbstractWe introduce a refined version of observation for CCS which allows the observer to see the d...
AbstractThis paper presents a process algebra for distributed systems in which some actions may take...
A framework allowing a unified and rigorous definition of the semantics of concurrency is proposed. ...
This paper studies causality in the ß-calculus. Our notion of causality combines the dependencies gi...
AbstractIn this paper we present a Process Algebra for the specification of concurrent, communicatin...
This paper studies algebraic models for concurrency, in light of recent work on Concurrent Kleene Al...
This paper presents a process algebra for distributed systems in which some actions may take precede...
AbstractThe domain of partially terminated finite and infinite words is commonly used to give denota...
We propose a process algebra obtained by adapting the process algebra with continuous relative timi...
AbstractIn recent years several equivalences between nondeterministic and concurrent processes have ...
A new semantics for process description languages that discriminates according to the distribution i...
Abstract. This work studies the notion of locality in the context of process specication. It relates...
AbstractProcess algebra semantics can be categorised into noninterleaving semantics, where parallel ...
We study a notion of observation for concurrent processes which allows the observer to see the distr...
A methodology is introduced for defining truly concurrent semantics of processes as equivalence clas...
AbstractWe introduce a refined version of observation for CCS which allows the observer to see the d...
AbstractThis paper presents a process algebra for distributed systems in which some actions may take...
A framework allowing a unified and rigorous definition of the semantics of concurrency is proposed. ...
This paper studies causality in the ß-calculus. Our notion of causality combines the dependencies gi...
AbstractIn this paper we present a Process Algebra for the specification of concurrent, communicatin...
This paper studies algebraic models for concurrency, in light of recent work on Concurrent Kleene Al...
This paper presents a process algebra for distributed systems in which some actions may take precede...
AbstractThe domain of partially terminated finite and infinite words is commonly used to give denota...
We propose a process algebra obtained by adapting the process algebra with continuous relative timi...
AbstractIn recent years several equivalences between nondeterministic and concurrent processes have ...