We take a fresh look at strong probabilistic bisimulations for processes which exhibit both non-deterministic and probabilistic behaviour. We suggest that it is natural to interpret such processes as distributions over states in a probabilistic labelled transition system, a pLTS; this enables us to adapt the standard notion of contextual equivalence to this setting. We then prove that a novel form of bisimulation equivalence between distributions are both sound and complete with respect to this contextual equivalence. We also show that a very simple extension to HML, Hennessy-Milner Logic, provides finite explanations for inequivalences between distributions. Finally we show that our bisimulations between distributions in a pLTS are simply an alternative characterisation of a standard notion of probabilistic bisimulation equivalence, defined between states in a pLTS. © 2012 BCS.
CITATION STYLE
Hennessy, M. (2012). Exploring probabilistic bisimulations, part i. Formal Aspects of Computing, 24(4–6), 749–768. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00165-012-0242-7
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