LFCS Seminar: Tuesday 30 April-Marco Bernardo Title: A Process Algebraic Theory of Reversible Systems Abstract: Reversibility is the capability of a system of undoing its own actions starting from the last performed one, in such a way that a past consistent state is reached. This is not trivial in the case of concurrent systems, as the last performed action may not be uniquely identifiable. There are several approaches to address causality-consistent reversibility, some of which include a notion of forward-reverse bisimilarity. We first present a process calculus for reversible sequential systems on which we investigate compositionality properties, axiomatizations, and modal logic characterizations of forward-reverse bisimilarity as well as of its two components, i.e., forward bisimilarity and reverse bisimilarity, both in the strong case and in the weak case. Then we add parallel composition and develop expansion laws for the considered equivalences, with forward bisimilarity being interleaving while reverse and forward-reverse bisimilarities being truly concurrent. Apr 30 2024 16.10 - 17.00 LFCS Seminar: Tuesday 30 April-Marco Bernardo Marco Bernardo, University of Urbino http://www.sti.uniurb.it/bernardo/ IF, G.03
LFCS Seminar: Tuesday 30 April-Marco Bernardo Title: A Process Algebraic Theory of Reversible Systems Abstract: Reversibility is the capability of a system of undoing its own actions starting from the last performed one, in such a way that a past consistent state is reached. This is not trivial in the case of concurrent systems, as the last performed action may not be uniquely identifiable. There are several approaches to address causality-consistent reversibility, some of which include a notion of forward-reverse bisimilarity. We first present a process calculus for reversible sequential systems on which we investigate compositionality properties, axiomatizations, and modal logic characterizations of forward-reverse bisimilarity as well as of its two components, i.e., forward bisimilarity and reverse bisimilarity, both in the strong case and in the weak case. Then we add parallel composition and develop expansion laws for the considered equivalences, with forward bisimilarity being interleaving while reverse and forward-reverse bisimilarities being truly concurrent. Apr 30 2024 16.10 - 17.00 LFCS Seminar: Tuesday 30 April-Marco Bernardo Marco Bernardo, University of Urbino http://www.sti.uniurb.it/bernardo/ IF, G.03
Apr 30 2024 16.10 - 17.00 LFCS Seminar: Tuesday 30 April-Marco Bernardo Marco Bernardo, University of Urbino http://www.sti.uniurb.it/bernardo/