Data di Pubblicazione:
2009
Abstract:
Pure, or type-free, Linear Logic proof nets are Turing complete once cut-elimination is considered as computation. We introduce modal impredicativity as a new form of impredicativity causing cut- elimination to be problematic from a complexity point of view. Modal impredicativity occurs when, during reduction, the conclusion of a residual of a box b interacts with a node that belongs to the proof net inside another residual of b. Technically speaking, superlazy reduction is a new notion of reduction that allows to control modal impredicativity. More specifically, superlazy reduction replicates a box only when all its copies are opened. This makes the overall cost of reducing a proof net finite and predictable. Specifically, superlazy reduction applied to any pure proof nets takes primitive recursive time. Moreover, any primitive recursive function can be computed by a pure proof net via superlazy reduction.
Tipologia CRIS:
04A-Conference paper in volume
Keywords:
Linear logic; Implicit computational complexity; Proof theory.
Elenco autori:
Ugo Dal Lago; Luca Roversi; Luca Vercelli
Link alla scheda completa:
Titolo del libro:
Logical Foundations of Computer Science
Pubblicato in: