Intensionality

Author(s):  
E. A. Ashcroft ◽  
A. A. Faustini ◽  
R. Jaggannathan ◽  
W. W. Wadge

The intensional programming language, Lucid, described in Chapter 1 is based directly on intensional logic, a family of mathematical formal systems that permit expressions whose value depends on hidden contexts or indices. Our use of intensional logic is one in which the hidden contexts or indices are integers or tuples of integers. Intensional logic, as used to give semantics to natural language, uses a much more general notion of context or index. Of course, intensional logic is hardly the first example of a formal system of interest to both logicians and computer scientists. The language LISP (invented by McCarthy and others in the early sixties [34]) was originally intended to be an adaptation of the lambda calculus, although it diverged in its treatment of variable-binding and higher-order functions. Shortly after, however, Landin produced ISWIM, the first true functional language [30]. These “logical” programming languages such as ISWIM are in many respects vastly superior to the more conventional ones. They are much simpler and better defined and yet at the same time more regular and more powerful. These languages are notationally closer to ordinary mathematics and are much more problem-oriented. Finally, programs are still expressions in a formal system, and are still subject to the rules of the formal system. It is therefore much easier to reason formally about their correctness, or to apply meaningpreserving transformations. With these languages, programming really is a respectable branch of applied mathematical logic. These logic-based (or declarative) languages at first proved difficult to implement efficiently, and interest in declarative languages declined soon after the promising initial work of McCarthy and Landin. Fortunately, the advent of large scale integration and new compiling technology reawakened interest in declarative languages, and brought about a series of new “second generation” declarative languages, such as Prolog [12] and Miranda [44]. Lucid itself was one of these second generation declarative languages. Lucid is based not so much on classical logical systems as on the possible worlds approach to intensional logic—itself a relatively new branch of logic [43] which reached maturity during the period (1965-75) in which declarative programming languages were in eclipse.

Very-large-scale integration (VLSI) offers new opportunities in computer architecture. The cost of a processor has been reduced to that of a few thousand bytes of memory, with the result that parallel computers can be constructed as easily and economically as their sequential predecessors. In particular, a parallel computer constructed by replication of a standard computing element is well suited to the mass-production economics of the technology. The emergence of the new parallel computers has stimulated the development of new programming languages and algorithms. One example is the Occam language which has been designed to enable applications to be expressed in a form suitable for execution on a variety of parallel architectures. Further developments in language and architecture will enable processing resources to be allocated and deallocated as freely as memory, giving rise to some hope that users of general-purpose parallel computers will be freed from the current need to design algorithms to suit specific architectures.


2014 ◽  
Vol 155 (26) ◽  
pp. 1011-1018 ◽  
Author(s):  
György Végvári ◽  
Edina Vidéki

Plants seem to be rather defenceless, they are unable to do motion, have no nervous system or immune system unlike animals. Besides this, plants do have hormones, though these substances are produced not in glands. In view of their complexity they lagged behind animals, however, plant organisms show large scale integration in their structure and function. In higher plants, such as in animals, the intercellular communication is fulfilled through chemical messengers. These specific compounds in plants are called phytohormones, or in a wide sense, bioregulators. Even a small quantity of these endogenous organic compounds are able to regulate the operation, growth and development of higher plants, and keep the connection between cells, tissues and synergy beween organs. Since they do not have nervous and immume systems, phytohormones play essential role in plants’ life. Orv. Hetil., 2014, 155(26), 1011–1018.


Author(s):  
YongAn LI

Background: The symbolic nodal analysis acts as a pivotal part of the very large scale integration (VLSI) design. Methods: In this work, based on the terminal relations for the pathological elements and the voltage differencing inverting buffered amplifier (VDIBA), twelve alternative pathological models for the VDIBA are presented. Moreover, the proposed models are applied to the VDIBA-based second-order filter and oscillator so as to simplify the circuit analysis. Results: The result shows that the behavioral models for the VDIBA are systematic, effective and powerful in the symbolic nodal circuit analysis.</P>


Author(s):  
H. R. Beelitz ◽  
S. Y. Levy ◽  
R. J. Linhardt ◽  
H. S. Miller

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