On a Higher-Order Calculus of Computational Fields

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Giorgio Audrito, Mirko Viroli, Ferruccio Damiani, Danilo Pianini, Jacob Beal
Jorge A. P{\'{e}}rez, Nobuko Yoshida (eds.)
Formal Techniques for Distributed Objects, Components, and Systems, pages 289-292
Lecture Notes in Computer Science 11535
Springer
2019

Computational fields have been proposed as an effective abstraction to fill the gap between the macro-level of distributed systems (specifying a system’s collective behaviour) and the micro-level (individual devices’ actions of computation and interaction to implement that collective specification), thereby providing a basis to better facilitate the engineering of collective APIs and complex systems at higher levels of abstraction. This approach is particularly suited to complex large-scale distributed systems, like the Internet-of-Things and Cyber-Physical Systems, where new mechanisms are needed to address composability and reusability of collective adaptive behaviour. This work introduces a full formal foundation for field computations, in terms of a core calculus equipped with typing, denotational, and operational semantics. Critically, we apply techniques for formal programming languages to collective adaptive systems: we provide formal establishment of a link between the micro- and macro-levels of collective adaptive systems, via a result of computational adequacy and abstraction for the (aggregate) denotational semantics with respect to the (per-device) operational semantics.