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Concurrency Theory Calculi An Automata For Modelling Untimed And Timed Concurrent Systems Howard Bowman

  • SKU: BELL-48330458
Concurrency Theory Calculi An Automata For Modelling Untimed And Timed Concurrent Systems Howard Bowman
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Concurrency Theory Calculi An Automata For Modelling Untimed And Timed Concurrent Systems Howard Bowman instant download after payment.

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.05 MB
Pages: 444
Author: Howard Bowman, Rodolfo Gomez
ISBN: 9781852338954, 1852338954
Language: English
Year: 2006

Product desciption

Concurrency Theory Calculi An Automata For Modelling Untimed And Timed Concurrent Systems Howard Bowman by Howard Bowman, Rodolfo Gomez 9781852338954, 1852338954 instant download after payment.

In the world we live in concurrency is the norm. For example, the human body is a massively concurrent system, comprising a huge number of cells, all simtaneously evolving and independently engaging in their individual biological processing. In addition, in the biological world, truly sequential systems rarely arise. However, they are more common when manmade artefacts are considered. In particular, computer systems are often developed from a sequential perspective. Why is this? The simple reason is that it is easier for us to think about sequential, rather than concurrent, systems. Thus, we use sequentiality as a device to simplify the design process. However, the need for increasingly powerful, flexible and usable computer systems mitigates against simplifying sequentiality assumptions. A good example of this is the all powerful position held by the Internet, which is highly concurrent at many di?erent levels of decomposition. Thus, the modern computer scientist (and indeed the modern scientist in general) is forced to think about concurrent systems and the subtle and intricate behaviour that emerges from the interaction of simultaneously evolving components. Over a period of 25 years, or so, the field of concurrency theory has been involved in the development of a set of mathematical techniques that can help system developers to think about and build concurrent systems. These theories are the subject matter of this book.

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