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Takashi Yokomori

Researcher at Waseda University

Publications -  100
Citations -  2896

Takashi Yokomori is an academic researcher from Waseda University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Regular language & Recursively enumerable language. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 96 publications receiving 2773 citations. Previous affiliations of Takashi Yokomori include International Institute of Minnesota & Fujitsu.

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Journal Article

Spiking Neural P Systems

TL;DR: In this article, the authors introduce a class of neural-like P systems which they call spiking neural P systems (in short, SN P systems), in which the result of a computation is the time between the moments when a specified neuron spikes.
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On spiking neural P systems

TL;DR: This work deals with several aspects concerning the formal verification of SN P systems and the computing power of some variants, and proposes a methodology based on the information given by the transition diagram associated with an SN P system which establishes the soundness and completeness of the system with respect to the problem it tries to resolve.
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Molecular computation by DNA hairpin formation.

TL;DR: Hairpin formation by single-stranded DNA molecules was exploited in a DNA-based computation in order to explore the feasibility of autonomous molecular computing and the satisfiability of a given Boolean formula was examined autonomously.
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Tree adjoining grammars for RNA structure prediction

TL;DR: This paper introduces a special subclass of TAGs and develops a fast parsing algorithm for the subclass, together with some of its language theoretic characterizations, and develops and demonstrates the effectiveness of the system by presenting some experimental results obtained from biological data.

Spiking Neural dP Systems

TL;DR: This work brings together two topics recently introduced in membrane computing, the much investigated spiking neural P systems and the distributed P systems, and introduces SN dP systems, with the possibility to input, at their request, spikes from the environment.