AbstractWe present the π-calculus, a calculus of communicating systems in which one can naturally express processes which have changing structure. Not only may the component agents of a system be arbitrarily linked, but a communication between neighbours may carry information which changes that linkage. The calculus is an extension of the process algebra CCS, following work by Engberg and Nielsen, who added mobility to CCS while preserving its algebraic properties. The π-calculus gains simplicity by removing all distinction between variables and constants; communication links are identified by names, and computation is represented purely as the communication of names across links. After an illustrated description of how the π-calculus gener...
AbstractThis paper presents the formal specification of an abstract machine or the M-calculus, a new...
AbstractWe present an ambient-like calculus in which the open capability is dropped, and a new form ...
AbstractA calculus of higher order communicating systems (CHOCS) was presented by the author in ["Pr...
AbstractWe present the π-calculus, a calculus of communicating systems in which one can naturally ex...
AbstractThis is the second of two papers in which we present the π-calculus, a calculus of mobile pr...
We study mobile systems, i.e. systems with a dynamically changing communication topology, from a pr...
AbstractThe π-calculus is a process algebra which originates from CCS and permits a natural modellin...
AbstractIn process algebras, bisimulation equivalence is typically defined directly in terms of the ...
For a long time, the quest for a formal foundation of concurrent programming has kept semanticists h...
AbstractWe present an encoding of the synchronous π-calculus in the calculus of Higher-order mobile ...
AbstractWe present a model of distributed computation which is based on a fragment of the π-calculus...
AbstractWe compare the first- and the higher-order paradigms for the representation of mobility in p...
AbstractWe present an encoding of the synchronous π-calculus in the calculus of Higher-Order Mobile ...
AbstractWe consider πI, a fragment of the π-calculus where only exchange of private names among proc...
This paper presents the underlying theory for a process calculus featuring process creation and sequ...
AbstractThis paper presents the formal specification of an abstract machine or the M-calculus, a new...
AbstractWe present an ambient-like calculus in which the open capability is dropped, and a new form ...
AbstractA calculus of higher order communicating systems (CHOCS) was presented by the author in ["Pr...
AbstractWe present the π-calculus, a calculus of communicating systems in which one can naturally ex...
AbstractThis is the second of two papers in which we present the π-calculus, a calculus of mobile pr...
We study mobile systems, i.e. systems with a dynamically changing communication topology, from a pr...
AbstractThe π-calculus is a process algebra which originates from CCS and permits a natural modellin...
AbstractIn process algebras, bisimulation equivalence is typically defined directly in terms of the ...
For a long time, the quest for a formal foundation of concurrent programming has kept semanticists h...
AbstractWe present an encoding of the synchronous π-calculus in the calculus of Higher-order mobile ...
AbstractWe present a model of distributed computation which is based on a fragment of the π-calculus...
AbstractWe compare the first- and the higher-order paradigms for the representation of mobility in p...
AbstractWe present an encoding of the synchronous π-calculus in the calculus of Higher-Order Mobile ...
AbstractWe consider πI, a fragment of the π-calculus where only exchange of private names among proc...
This paper presents the underlying theory for a process calculus featuring process creation and sequ...
AbstractThis paper presents the formal specification of an abstract machine or the M-calculus, a new...
AbstractWe present an ambient-like calculus in which the open capability is dropped, and a new form ...
AbstractA calculus of higher order communicating systems (CHOCS) was presented by the author in ["Pr...