Membrane systems with symport/antiport rules compute by just moving objects among membranes, and not by changing the objects themselves. In these systems the environment plays an active role because, not only it receives objects from the system, but it also sends objects into the system. Actually, in this framework it is commonly assumed that an arbitrarily large number of copies of some objects are initially available in the environment. This special feature has been widely exploited for the design of e cient solutions to computationally hard problems in the framework of tissue like P systems able to create an exponential workspace in polynomial time (e.g. via cell division or cell separation rules). This paper deals with cell-lik...
Membrane fission is a process by which a biological membrane is split into two new ones in the manne...
Membrane computing is a computing paradigm providing a class of distributed parallel computing devi...
In tissue P systems several cells (elementary membranes) communicate through symport/antiport rules...
Cooperation is doubtless a relevant ingredient on rewriting rules based computing models. This paper...
Membrane ssion is a process by which a biological membrane is split into two new ones in such a wa...
Cell-like P systems where communication between the regions are carried out by rules of type symport...
Classical membrane systems with symport/antiport rules observe the con- servation law, in the sense...
Classical membrane systems with symport/antiport rules observe the con- servation law, in the sense...
The search for new mechanisms and tools allowing us to tackle the famousPversusNPproblem from new pe...
P systems are computing models inspired by some basic features of biological membranes. In this work...
In this paper we consider symport/antiport P systems with one membrane and rules having at most two...
In tissue P systems several cells (elementary membranes) commu- nicate through symport/antiport rul...
From a computational complexity point of view, some syntactical ingredients play differentroles depe...
In tissue P systems several cells (elementary membranes) communicate through symport/antiport rules,...
Membrane computing is a computing paradigm providing a class of distributed parallel computing devi...
Membrane fission is a process by which a biological membrane is split into two new ones in the manne...
Membrane computing is a computing paradigm providing a class of distributed parallel computing devi...
In tissue P systems several cells (elementary membranes) communicate through symport/antiport rules...
Cooperation is doubtless a relevant ingredient on rewriting rules based computing models. This paper...
Membrane ssion is a process by which a biological membrane is split into two new ones in such a wa...
Cell-like P systems where communication between the regions are carried out by rules of type symport...
Classical membrane systems with symport/antiport rules observe the con- servation law, in the sense...
Classical membrane systems with symport/antiport rules observe the con- servation law, in the sense...
The search for new mechanisms and tools allowing us to tackle the famousPversusNPproblem from new pe...
P systems are computing models inspired by some basic features of biological membranes. In this work...
In this paper we consider symport/antiport P systems with one membrane and rules having at most two...
In tissue P systems several cells (elementary membranes) commu- nicate through symport/antiport rul...
From a computational complexity point of view, some syntactical ingredients play differentroles depe...
In tissue P systems several cells (elementary membranes) communicate through symport/antiport rules,...
Membrane computing is a computing paradigm providing a class of distributed parallel computing devi...
Membrane fission is a process by which a biological membrane is split into two new ones in the manne...
Membrane computing is a computing paradigm providing a class of distributed parallel computing devi...
In tissue P systems several cells (elementary membranes) communicate through symport/antiport rules...