AbstractWe look at a restricted model of a communicating P system, called RCPS, whose environment does not contain any object initially. The system can expel objects into the environment but only expelled objects can be retrieved from the environment. Such a system is initially given an input a1i1…anin (with each ij representing the multiplicity of distinguished object ai, 1⩽i⩽n) and is used as an acceptor. We show that RCPSs are equivalent to two-way multihead finite automata over bounded languages (i.e., subsets of a1*…an*, for some distinct symbols a1,…,an). We then show that there is an infinite hierarchy of RCPS's in terms of the number of membranes: For every r, there is an s>r and a unary language L accepted by an RCPS with s membran...
AbstractFirst, we consider P systems with active membranes, hence with the possibility that the memb...
This article brings together some rather powerful results on P systems in which the computation is p...
Classical membrane systems with symport/antiport rules observe the con- servation law, in the sense...
AbstractWe look at a restricted model of a communicating P system, called RCPS, whose environment do...
AbstractWe show how techniques in machine-based complexity can be used to analyze the complexity of ...
It is proved that four membranes su±ce to P systems with minimal symport/antiport to generate all r...
AbstractAn important open problem in the area of membrane computing is whether there is a model of P...
In this paper we consider symport/antiport P systems with one membrane and rules having at most two...
We improve, by using register machines, some existing universality results for specific models of P...
AbstractWe continue the analysis of P systems with gemmation of mobile membranes. We solve an open p...
Classical membrane systems with symport/antiport rules observe the con- servation law, in the sense...
AbstractIn addressing certain problems about membrane computing, a recent and active branch of natur...
This paper proposes a new model of P systems where the rules are activated by objects present in th...
We investigate the in uence that the ow of information in membrane systems has on their computat...
In this paper we consider P systems with linear membrane structures (only one membrane is elementar...
AbstractFirst, we consider P systems with active membranes, hence with the possibility that the memb...
This article brings together some rather powerful results on P systems in which the computation is p...
Classical membrane systems with symport/antiport rules observe the con- servation law, in the sense...
AbstractWe look at a restricted model of a communicating P system, called RCPS, whose environment do...
AbstractWe show how techniques in machine-based complexity can be used to analyze the complexity of ...
It is proved that four membranes su±ce to P systems with minimal symport/antiport to generate all r...
AbstractAn important open problem in the area of membrane computing is whether there is a model of P...
In this paper we consider symport/antiport P systems with one membrane and rules having at most two...
We improve, by using register machines, some existing universality results for specific models of P...
AbstractWe continue the analysis of P systems with gemmation of mobile membranes. We solve an open p...
Classical membrane systems with symport/antiport rules observe the con- servation law, in the sense...
AbstractIn addressing certain problems about membrane computing, a recent and active branch of natur...
This paper proposes a new model of P systems where the rules are activated by objects present in th...
We investigate the in uence that the ow of information in membrane systems has on their computat...
In this paper we consider P systems with linear membrane structures (only one membrane is elementar...
AbstractFirst, we consider P systems with active membranes, hence with the possibility that the memb...
This article brings together some rather powerful results on P systems in which the computation is p...
Classical membrane systems with symport/antiport rules observe the con- servation law, in the sense...