Elimination of quantifiers and undecidability in spatial logics for concurrency

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Abstract

Aiming at a deeper understanding of the essence of spatial logics for concurrency, we study a minimal spatial logic without quantifiers or any operators talking about names. The logic just includes the basic spatial operators void, composition and its adjunct, and the next step modality; for the model we consider a tiny fragment of CCS. We show that this core logic can already encode its own extension with quantifiers, and modalities for actions. From this result, we derive several consequences. Firstly, we establish the intensionality of the logic, we characterize the equivalence it induces on processes, and we derive characteristic formulas. Secondly, we show that, unlike in static spatial logics, the composition adjunct adds to the expressiveness of the logic, so that adjunct elimination is not possible for dynamic spatial logics, even quantifier-free. Finally, we prove that both model-checking and satisfiability problems are undecidable in our logic. We also conclude that our results extend to other calculi, namely the π-calculus and the ambient calculus. © Springer-Verlag 2004.

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APA

Caires, L., & Lozes, É. (2004). Elimination of quantifiers and undecidability in spatial logics for concurrency. Lecture Notes in Computer Science (Including Subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics), 3170, 240–257. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-28644-8_16

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