The Space and Motion of Communicating Agents
54 min read
Rate this book:
About This Book
The world is increasingly populated with interactive agents distributed in space, real or abstract. These agents can be artificial, as in computing systems that manage and monitor traffic or health; or they can be natural, e.g. communicating humans, or biological cells. It is important to be able to model networks of agents in order to understand and optimise their behaviour. Robin Milner describes in this book just such a model, by presenting a unified and rigorous structural theory, based on bigraphs, for systems of interacting agents. This theory is a bridge between the existing theories of concurrent processes and the aspirations for ubiquitous systems, whose enormous size challenges our understanding. The book is reasonably self-contained mathematically, and is designed to be learned from: examples and exercises abound, solutions for the latter are provided. Like Milner's other work, this is destined to have far-reaching and profound significance.
Buy This Book
Amazon
Ebook
→
Bookshop.org
Supports indie bookshops
→
Apple Books
Ebook
→
Open Library
Borrow
Free to borrow
→
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Robin Milner
A calculus of communicating systems
A complete axiomatisation for
A complete axiomatisation for observational congruence of finite-state behaviours
A theory of type polymorphism
A theory of type polymorphism in programming
Action structures for the (pi)
Action structures for the (pi)-calculus
Changes to the standard ML cor
Changes to the standard ML core language
Co-induction in relational sem
Co-induction in relational semantics