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Showing papers by "Peter Wegner published in 2005"


Book ChapterDOI
08 Jun 2005
TL;DR: This paper identifies and analyzes the historical reasons for widespread belief that no model of computation more expressive than Turing machines can exist, and presents one such model, Persistent Turing Machines (PTMs), which capture sequential interaction, which is a limited form of concurrency.
Abstract: According to the interactive view of computation, communication happens during the computation, not before or after it. This approach, distinct from concurrency theory and the theory of computation, represents a paradigm shift that changes our understanding of what is computation and how it is modeled. Interaction machines extend Turing machines with interaction to capture the behavior of concurrent systems, promising to bridge these two fields. This promise is hindered by the widespread belief, incorrectly known as the Church-Turing thesis, that no model of computation more expressive than Turing machines can exist. Yet Turing's original thesis only refers to the computation of functions and explicitly excludes other computational paradigms such as interaction. In this paper, we identify and analyze the historical reasons for this widespread belief. Only by accepting that it is false can we begin to properly investigate formal models of interaction machines. We conclude the paper by presenting one such model, Persistent Turing Machines (PTMs). PTMs capture sequential interaction, which is a limited form of concurrency; they allow us to formulate the Sequential Interaction Thesis, going beyond the expressiveness of Turing machines and of the Church-Turing thesis.

73 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is pleased that panelists agreed to contribute short reviews relating to the panel on “The Role of Agent Interaction in Models of Computation”, at the Workshop on Foundations of Interactive Computation, held in Edinburgh in April 2005.

8 citations