AbstractProcess algebra semantics can be categorised into noninterleaving semantics, where parallel composition is considered a primitive operator, and interleaving semantics, where concurrency is reduced to sequentiality plus nondeterminism. The former have an appealing intuitive justification, but the latter are mathematically more tractable.This paper addresses the study of noninterleaving semantics in the framework of process algebras for mobile systems, like π-calculus [19, 17]. We focus on location bisimulation (⁈/), in our opinion one of the most convincing non-interleaving equivalences, which aims to describe the spatial dependencies on processes. We introduce ⁈/ in π-calculus following the definition for CCS given in [5]. Our main ...
AbstractPure mobile ambients is a process calculus suitable to focus on issues related to mobility, ...
We study a notion of observation for concurrent processes which allows the observer to see the distr...
A new semantics for process description languages that discriminates according to the distribution i...
This paper studies causality in the π-calculus. Our notion of causality combines the dependencies gi...
This paper studies causality in the ß-calculus. Our notion of causality combines the dependencies gi...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:5186.0913(EU-ECS-LFCS--94-282) / BLD...
A general framework proposed by Degano, De Nicola and Montanari has been fruitful to define in a nat...
AbstractWe present the π-calculus, a calculus of communicating systems in which one can naturally ex...
We study causality in the π-calculus. Our notion of causality combines the dependencies given by the...
AbstractThis paper studies causality in the π-calculus. Our notion of causality combines the depende...
AbstractWhen concurrency is a primitive notion, models of process calculi usually include commuting ...
Parametrised replication and replication are common waysof expressing infinite computation in proces...
AbstractWe propose an abstract interpretation-based analysis for automatically proving non-trivial p...
We propose an abstract interpretation-based analysis for automatically proving non-trivial propertie...
AbstractIn process algebras, bisimulation equivalence is typically defined directly in terms of the ...
AbstractPure mobile ambients is a process calculus suitable to focus on issues related to mobility, ...
We study a notion of observation for concurrent processes which allows the observer to see the distr...
A new semantics for process description languages that discriminates according to the distribution i...
This paper studies causality in the π-calculus. Our notion of causality combines the dependencies gi...
This paper studies causality in the ß-calculus. Our notion of causality combines the dependencies gi...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:5186.0913(EU-ECS-LFCS--94-282) / BLD...
A general framework proposed by Degano, De Nicola and Montanari has been fruitful to define in a nat...
AbstractWe present the π-calculus, a calculus of communicating systems in which one can naturally ex...
We study causality in the π-calculus. Our notion of causality combines the dependencies given by the...
AbstractThis paper studies causality in the π-calculus. Our notion of causality combines the depende...
AbstractWhen concurrency is a primitive notion, models of process calculi usually include commuting ...
Parametrised replication and replication are common waysof expressing infinite computation in proces...
AbstractWe propose an abstract interpretation-based analysis for automatically proving non-trivial p...
We propose an abstract interpretation-based analysis for automatically proving non-trivial propertie...
AbstractIn process algebras, bisimulation equivalence is typically defined directly in terms of the ...
AbstractPure mobile ambients is a process calculus suitable to focus on issues related to mobility, ...
We study a notion of observation for concurrent processes which allows the observer to see the distr...
A new semantics for process description languages that discriminates according to the distribution i...