In the past decade game semantics has emerged as a new and successful paradigm in the field of semantics of logics and programming languages. Game semantics made its breakthrough in computer science in the early 90s, providing an innovative set of methods and techniques for the analysis of logical systems. Subsequently, game-semantic techniques led to the development of the first syntax-independent fully-abstract models for a variety of programming languages, ranging from the purely functional to languages with non-functional features such as control, references or concurrency. There are also emerging connections between game semantics and other semantic theories, notably theories of concurrency such as the pi-calculus, and traditional tree-based semantics of lambda calculi. In addition to semantic analysis, an algorithmic approach to game semantics has recently been developed, with a view to applications in computer assisted verification and program analysis.
The aim of the workshop is to provide opportunity for interaction with other Etaps'05 events and to become a major meeting point in the research area of Game Semantics and its applications.
In case you are in Edinburgh on April 2-3, here is the workshop program.
Recent comments
22 weeks 10 hours ago
22 weeks 14 hours ago
22 weeks 14 hours ago
44 weeks 1 day ago
48 weeks 3 days ago
50 weeks 22 hours ago
50 weeks 22 hours ago
1 year 4 days ago
1 year 5 weeks ago
1 year 5 weeks ago