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algebra of communicating processes: proceedings of acp94, the first workshop on the algebra of communicating processes, utrecht, the netherlands, 16 - (in English)
Alban Ponse
(Illustrated by)
·
Christiaan Verhoef
(Illustrated by)
·
Sebastiaan F. M. Van Vlijmen
(Illustrated by)
·
Springer
· Hardcover
algebra of communicating processes: proceedings of acp94, the first workshop on the algebra of communicating processes, utrecht, the netherlands, 16 - (in English) - Ponse, Alban ; Verhoef, Christiaan ; Vlijmen, Sebastiaan F. M. Van
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Synopsis "algebra of communicating processes: proceedings of acp94, the first workshop on the algebra of communicating processes, utrecht, the netherlands, 16 - (in English)"
ACP, the Algebra of Communicating Processes, is an algebraic approach to the study of concurrent processes, initiated by Jan Bergstra and Jan Will em Klop in the early eighties. These proceedings comprise the contributions to ACP94, the first workshop devoted to ACP. The work- shop was held at Utrecht University, 16-17 May 1994. These proceedings are meant to provide an overview of current research in the area of ACP. They contain fifteen contributions. The first one is a classical paper on ACP by J.A. Bergstra and J.W. Klop: The Algebra of Recursively Defined Processes and the Algebra of Regular Processes, Report IW 235/83, Mathematical Centre, Amsterdam, 1983. It serves as an introduction to the remainder of the proceedings and, indeed, as a general introduction to ACP. An extended abstract of this paper is published under the same title in the ICALP' 84 proceedings. Of the re- maining contributions, three were submitted by the invited speakers and the others were selected by the programme committee. As for the presentations, Jos Baeten, Rob van Glabbeek, Jan Friso Groote, and Frits Vaandrager were each invited to deliver a lecture. A paper relating to Frits Vaandrager's lecture has already been submitted for publication elsewhere and is not, therefore, included in these pro- ceedings. Gabriel Ciobanu, one of our guests, gave an impression of his work in an extra lecture. Furthermore, ten presentations were given on the basis of selected papers.