Abstract interpretation can be used to formalize the concept of parametricity in the concurrency field. The concrete domain is the proved transition system, whose transitions are labelled by encodings of the parallel structure of processes. Suitable relabelling functions of proved transitions allow us to retrieve many non interleaving models presented in the literature. We prove here that such relabelling functions are indeed abstraction functions in the sense of abstract interpretations, considering causality as a test-bed. They induce Galois connections between the concrete domain and the abstract semantic models. We prove that abstractions preserve non interleaving bisimulations
Models for concurrency can be classified with respect to three relevant parameters: behaviour/system...
AbstractCategory theory has been successfully employed to structure the confusing set-up of models a...
We propose a logic for true concurrency whose formulae predicate about events in computations and th...
Fairness in a non-interleaving semantic model for concurrency has been investigated. In contrast to ...
A flexible abstraction mechanism for models of concurrency, which allows systems which "look the sam...
Most of the SOS semantics for concurrent systems can be derived by abstracting on the inference ru...
A central problem in the area of concurrency is the very definition of concurrency. Despite several ...
Logical deduction and abstraction from detail are fundamental, yet distinct aspects of reasoning abo...
AbstractThe overall intention of this work is to investigate the ability to regard a finite computat...
AbstractA simple domain theory for concurrency is presented. Based on a categorical model of linear ...
International audienceWe identify a general principle of distributed computing: one cannot force two...
The aim of this paper is to examine some basic topics of true concurrency from the viewpoint of prog...
A simple domain theory for concurrency is presented. Based on a categorical model of linear logic an...
This book presents the fundamentals of concurrency theory with clarity and rigor. The authors start ...
We study models of concurrency based on labelled transition systems where abstractions are induced b...
Models for concurrency can be classified with respect to three relevant parameters: behaviour/system...
AbstractCategory theory has been successfully employed to structure the confusing set-up of models a...
We propose a logic for true concurrency whose formulae predicate about events in computations and th...
Fairness in a non-interleaving semantic model for concurrency has been investigated. In contrast to ...
A flexible abstraction mechanism for models of concurrency, which allows systems which "look the sam...
Most of the SOS semantics for concurrent systems can be derived by abstracting on the inference ru...
A central problem in the area of concurrency is the very definition of concurrency. Despite several ...
Logical deduction and abstraction from detail are fundamental, yet distinct aspects of reasoning abo...
AbstractThe overall intention of this work is to investigate the ability to regard a finite computat...
AbstractA simple domain theory for concurrency is presented. Based on a categorical model of linear ...
International audienceWe identify a general principle of distributed computing: one cannot force two...
The aim of this paper is to examine some basic topics of true concurrency from the viewpoint of prog...
A simple domain theory for concurrency is presented. Based on a categorical model of linear logic an...
This book presents the fundamentals of concurrency theory with clarity and rigor. The authors start ...
We study models of concurrency based on labelled transition systems where abstractions are induced b...
Models for concurrency can be classified with respect to three relevant parameters: behaviour/system...
AbstractCategory theory has been successfully employed to structure the confusing set-up of models a...
We propose a logic for true concurrency whose formulae predicate about events in computations and th...