Robin Milner’s research while affiliated with University of Cambridge and other places

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (1)


The Space and Motion of Communicating Agents
  • Book

January 2009

·

102 Reads

·

359 Citations

Robin Milner

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 optimize their behavior. 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 self-contained mathematically and is designed to be learned from: examples and exercises abound, solutions for the latter are provided.

Citations (1)


... This section offers a high-level overview of these requirements, setting aside a detailed description of the formal system for another paper, and instead relying on composition diagrams to visually represent the different components of a compositional model, including processes, ports, states, connections, and nesting. This essay focuses on a composition framework called "process bigraphs", which is an evolutionary extension of Robin Milner's bigraphs [28] (Fig. 2A), and was initially implemented by Vivarium [15]. Bigraphs are a powerful framework for compositional modeling due to their ability to represent complex systems through hierarchical structures and flexible reconfigurations, related to agent-based modeling. ...

Reference:

Prelude to a Compositional Systems Biology
The Space and Motion of Communicating Agents
  • Citing Book
  • January 2009