Events: detail

Asynchronous games: Innocence without alternation

Hosted by:
QMUL Department of Computer Science
Speaker:
Samuel Mimram, Université Paris Diderot / Paris 7
Starts:
October 24, 2007 at 03:30 pm
Ends:
October 24, 2007 at 04:30 pm
Location:
Queen Mary, University of London, Department of Computer Science, Room CS/446, Mile End Road, London, E1 4NS United Kingdom
Maps:

Description

Joint QMUL/Imperial College London Theory Seminar

The notion of innocent strategy was introduced by Hyland and Ong in order to capture the interactive behaviour of lambda-terms and PCF programs. An innocent strategy is defined as an alternating strategy with partial memory, in which the strategy plays according to its view. Extending the definition to non-alternating strategies is problematic, because the traditional definition of views is based on the hypothesis that Opponent and Proponent alternate during the interaction. Here, we take advantage of the diagrammatic reformulation of alternating innocence in asynchronous games, in order to provide a tentative definition of innocence in non-alternating games. The task is interesting, and far from easy. It requires the combination of true concurrency and game semantics, clarifying the relationship between asynchronous games and concurrent games. It also requires an interactive reformulation of the usual acyclicity criterion of linear logic, as well as a directed variant, as a scheduling criterion.

Registration required:
No
Free:
Yes
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