Relational Methods for Computer Science Applications (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2001)


The origins of relational theories can be found in the work of three 19th cen- tury mathematicians: Augustus de Morgan (1864, On the syllogism IV and on the logic of relations), Charles Sanders Peirce (1882, Brief description of the algebra of relatives) and Ernst Schroder (1895, Vorlesungen iiber die Al- gebra und Logik der Relative). The modern origins of the theory of relations are due to Alfred Tarski (14 January 1902, Warsaw -26 October 1983, Berke- ley). His paper' On the calculus of Relations' published in 1941 gave rise to an algebraic theory of relations which is still extensively studied. In the 1970s, the applications of relational theories to various applied sciences emerged. Nowadays relational theories are experiencing a period of extensive development, with the emergence of new theories and systems allow- ing better understanding and better use of such theories. Relational theories have been used, among others, in the following fields: * Theory of programs: program specification, program verification, mod- elling concurrency, process calculi, semantics of programming languages; * Databases: relational databases, tabular methods, dependency theory, rectangular and difunctional decomposition of databases; * Computational linguistics: relational semantics of natural languages, re- lational grammars, Lambek calculus; * Spatial reasoning: modelling of relationships between space regions; * Handling uncertainty: fuzzy relations, many-valued relations, information relations. Indeed, the concept of relation emerges again and again throughout computer science, from its theoretical foundations to very practical implementations.

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The origins of relational theories can be found in the work of three 19th cen- tury mathematicians: Augustus de Morgan (1864, On the syllogism IV and on the logic of relations), Charles Sanders Peirce (1882, Brief description of the algebra of relatives) and Ernst Schroder (1895, Vorlesungen iiber die Al- gebra und Logik der Relative). The modern origins of the theory of relations are due to Alfred Tarski (14 January 1902, Warsaw -26 October 1983, Berke- ley). His paper' On the calculus of Relations' published in 1941 gave rise to an algebraic theory of relations which is still extensively studied. In the 1970s, the applications of relational theories to various applied sciences emerged. Nowadays relational theories are experiencing a period of extensive development, with the emergence of new theories and systems allow- ing better understanding and better use of such theories. Relational theories have been used, among others, in the following fields: * Theory of programs: program specification, program verification, mod- elling concurrency, process calculi, semantics of programming languages; * Databases: relational databases, tabular methods, dependency theory, rectangular and difunctional decomposition of databases; * Computational linguistics: relational semantics of natural languages, re- lational grammars, Lambek calculus; * Spatial reasoning: modelling of relationships between space regions; * Handling uncertainty: fuzzy relations, many-valued relations, information relations. Indeed, the concept of relation emerges again and again throughout computer science, from its theoretical foundations to very practical implementations.

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Physica Verlag,Wien

Country of origin

Austria

Series

Studies in Fuzziness and Soft Computing, 65

Release date

August 2012

Availability

Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days

First published

2001

Editors

,

Dimensions

235 x 155 x 16mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback

Pages

297

Edition

Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2001

ISBN-13

978-3-662-00362-6

Barcode

9783662003626

Categories

LSN

3-662-00362-7



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