Pinnacles of software engineering: 25 years of formal methods
Annals of Software Engineering
An Efficient Partial Order Reduction Algorithm with an Alternative Proviso Implementation
Formal Methods in System Design
L.0: A Truly Concurrent Executable Temporal Logic Language for Protocols
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering
Testing Layered Interconnection Networks
IEEE Transactions on Computers
On the ω-language expressive power of extended petri nets
Theoretical Computer Science - Expressiveness in concurrency
A bulk-synchronous parallel process algebra
Computer Languages, Systems and Structures
Automated deduction for verification
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
A Generalization of Semenov's Theorem to Automata over Real Numbers
CADE-22 Proceedings of the 22nd International Conference on Automated Deduction
Communication as an emergent metaphor for neuronal operation
Computation for metaphors, analogy, and agents
Complexity of fairness constraints for the Dolev-Yao attacker model
Proceedings of the 2011 ACM Symposium on Applied Computing
Multi-core systems modeling for formal verification of parallel algorithms
ACM SIGOPS Operating Systems Review
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From the Publisher:Theoretical computer science provides the foundations for understanding and exploiting the concepts and mechanisms in computing and information processing. This handbook will provide professionals and students with a comprehensive overview of the main results and developments in this rapidly evolving field. It consists of thirty-seven chapters in two volumes, all addressing core areas of theoretical computer science as it is practiced today. The material is written by leading American and European researchers, and each volume may be used independently. Volume A covers models of computation, complexity theory, data structures, and efficient computation in many recognized subdisciplines of theoretical computer science. Volume B presents a choice of material on the theory of automata and rewriting systems, the foundations of modem programming languages, logics for program specification and verification, and several chapters on the theoretic modeling of advanced information processing. The organization of each volume reflects the development of theoretical computer science from its classical roots to the modem theoretical approaches in parallel and distributed computing. Extensive bibliographies, a subject index, and list of contributors are included in each volume.