Behavioural equivalence via modalities for algebraic effects

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Abstract

The paper investigates behavioural equivalence between programs in a call-by-value functional language extended with a signature of (algebraic) effect-triggering operations. Two programs are considered as being behaviourally equivalent if they enjoy the same behavioural properties. To formulate this, we define a logic whose formulas specify behavioural properties. A crucial ingredient is a collection of modalities expressing effect-specific aspects of behaviour. We give a general theory of such modalities. If two conditions, openness and decomposability, are satisfied by the modalities then the logically specified behavioural equivalence coincides with a modality-defined notion of applicative bisimilarity, which can be proven to be a congruence by a generalisation of Howe’s method. We show that the openness and decomposability conditions hold for several examples of algebraic effects: nondeterminism, probabilistic choice, global store and input/output.

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Simpson, A., & Voorneveld, N. (2018). Behavioural equivalence via modalities for algebraic effects. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 10801 LNCS, pp. 300–326). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-89884-1_11

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