scholarly journals The Constant Trace Property in Noncommutative Optimization

Author(s):  
Ngoc Hoang Anh Mai ◽  
Abhishek Bhardwaj ◽  
Victor Magron
Keyword(s):  
1992 ◽  
Vol 01 (02) ◽  
pp. 161-184 ◽  
Author(s):  
YASUHIRO AKUTSU ◽  
TESTUO DEGUCHI ◽  
TOMOTADA OHTSUKI

We define a new hierarchy of isotopy invariants of colored oriented links through oriented tangle diagrams. We prove the colored braid relation and the Markov trace property explicitly.


2017 ◽  
Vol 126 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-71 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emmanuel Breuillard ◽  
Mehrdad Kalantar ◽  
Matthew Kennedy ◽  
Narutaka Ozawa

1987 ◽  
Vol 107 (1) ◽  
pp. 169-182 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco Fontana ◽  
James A Huckaba ◽  
Ira J Papick
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Carmine Abate ◽  
Roberto Blanco ◽  
Ștefan Ciobâcă ◽  
Adrien Durier ◽  
Deepak Garg ◽  
...  

AbstractCompiler correctness is, in its simplest form, defined as the inclusion of the set of traces of the compiled program into the set of traces of the original program, which is equivalent to the preservation of all trace properties. Here traces collect, for instance, the externally observable events of each execution. This definition requires, however, the set of traces of the source and target languages to be exactly the same, which is not the case when the languages are far apart or when observations are fine-grained. To overcome this issue, we study a generalized compiler correctness definition, which uses source and target traces drawn from potentially different sets and connected by an arbitrary relation. We set out to understand what guarantees this generalized compiler correctness definition gives us when instantiated with a non-trivial relation on traces. When this trace relation is not equality, it is no longer possible to preserve the trace properties of the source program unchanged. Instead, we provide a generic characterization of the target trace property ensured by correctly compiling a program that satisfies a given source property, and dually, of the source trace property one is required to show in order to obtain a certain target property for the compiled code. We show that this view on compiler correctness can naturally account for undefined behavior, resource exhaustion, different source and target values, side-channels, and various abstraction mismatches. Finally, we show that the same generalization also applies to many secure compilation definitions, which characterize the protection of a compiled program against linked adversarial code.


Author(s):  
G. CASSINELLI ◽  
V. S. VARADARAJAN
Keyword(s):  

We discuss some examples of complementary observables, in the sense of Accardi. We show that the trace property is not sufficient to determine such a pair of observables.


Author(s):  
Ansem Ben Cheikh ◽  
Yoann Blein ◽  
Salim Chehida ◽  
German Vega ◽  
Yves Ledru ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Jan Baumeister ◽  
Norine Coenen ◽  
Borzoo Bonakdarpour ◽  
Bernd Finkbeiner ◽  
César Sánchez

AbstractHyperproperties are properties of computational systems that require more than one trace to evaluate, e.g., many information-flow security and concurrency requirements. Where a trace property defines a set of traces, a hyperproperty defines a set of sets of traces. The temporal logics HyperLTL and HyperCTL* have been proposed to express hyperproperties. However, their semantics are synchronous in the sense that all traces proceed at the same speed and are evaluated at the same position. This precludes the use of these logics to analyze systems whose traces can proceed at different speeds and allow that different traces take stuttering steps independently. To solve this problem in this paper, we propose an asynchronous variant of HyperLTL. On the negative side, we show that the model-checking problem for this variant is undecidable. On the positive side, we identify a decidable fragment which covers a rich set of formulas with practical applications. We also propose two model-checking algorithms that reduce our problem to the HyperLTL model-checking problem in the synchronous semantics.


1998 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 627-639 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gurmeet K. Chadha ◽  
I.B.S. Passi

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