We consider the problem of verifying stochastic models of biochemical networks against behavioral properties expressed in temporal logic terms. Exact probabilistic verification approaches such as, for example, CSL/PCTL model checking, are undermined by a huge computational demand which rule them out for most real case studies. Less demanding approaches, such as statistical model checking, estimate the likelihood that a property is satisfied by sampling executions out of the stochastic model. We propose a methodology for efficiently estimating the likelihood that a LTL property f holds of a stochastic model of a biochemical network. As with other statistical verification techniques, the methodology we propose uses a stochastic simulation algorithm for generating execution samples, however there are three key aspects that improve the efficiency: first, the sample generation is driven by on-the-fly verification of f which results in optimal overall simulation time. Second, the confidence interval estimation for the probability of f to hold is based on an efficient variant of the Wilson method which ensures a faster convergence. Third, the whole methodology is designed according to a parallel fashion and a prototype software tool has been implemented that performs the sampling/verification process in parallel over an HPC architecture.
CITATION STYLE
Ballarini, P., Forlin, M., Mazza, T., & Prandi, D. (2009). Efficient parallel statistical model checking of biochemical networks. In Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science, EPTCS (Vol. 14, pp. 47–61). Open Publishing Association. https://doi.org/10.4204/EPTCS.14.4
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