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Interactive computation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In computer science, interactive computation is a mathematical model for computation that involves input/output communication with the external world during computation.

Uses

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Among the currently studied mathematical models of computation that attempt to capture interaction are Giorgi Japaridze's hard- and easy-play machines elaborated within the framework of computability logic, Dina Q. Goldin's Persistent Turing Machines (PTMs), and Yuri Gurevich's abstract state machines. Peter Wegner has additionally done a great deal of work on this area of computer science [citation needed].

See also

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References

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  • Interactive Computation: The New Paradigm ISBN 3-540-34666-X. Edited by D. Goldin, S. Smolka and P. Wegner. Springer, 2006.
  • D. Goldin, Persistent Turing Machines as a model of interactive computation. Lecture Notes in Computer Science 1762, pp. 116-135.
  • D. Goldin, S. Smolka, P. Attie, E. Sonderegger, Turing Machines, Transition Systems, and Interaction. J. Information and Computation 194:2 (2004), pp. 101-128
  • P. Wegner, Interactive foundations of computing. Theoretical Computer Science 192 (1998), pp. 315-351.
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