Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
439216 Theoretical Computer Science 2008 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

Membrane systems (with promoters and inhibitors) are a computational model inspired by the way living cells are divided by membranes into compartments where chemical reactions may take place. We consider synchrony and asynchrony between executed reactions in the computations of such systems using Petri nets and their processes as a formal behavioural model. We first discuss different definitions of individual computational steps, and show how they can be rendered within the Petri net domain by assigning all transitions localities corresponding to the compartments, and using activator and inhibitor arcs. The non-sequential semantics of the resulting nets is formalised through processes based on occurrence nets augmented with additional information about localities and activator/inhibitor arcs. Such processes provide a convenient tool for analysing synchrony and asynchrony in the executions of membrane systems and shed light on the causal relationships between the reactions taking place.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computational Theory and Mathematics