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Proceedings of the 31st Annual ACM/IEEE Symposium on Logic in Computer Science, 2016
This is a paper on Stone duality in computer science with special focus on topics with applications in formal language theory. In Section 2 we give a general overview of Stone duality in its various forms: for Boolean algebras, distributive lattices, and frames. For distributive lattices, we discuss both Stone and Priestley duality.
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This is a paper on Stone duality in computer science with special focus on topics with applications in formal language theory. In Section 2 we give a general overview of Stone duality in its various forms: for Boolean algebras, distributive lattices, and frames. For distributive lattices, we discuss both Stone and Priestley duality.
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Transactions on Computational Science XXII
2008The LNCS journal Transactions on Computational Science reflects recent developments in the field of Computational Science, conceiving the field not as a mere ancillary science but rather as an innovative approach supporting many other scientific disciplines.
C. J. Kenneth Tan, Marina L. Gavrilova
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2015
This chapter discusses teaching science and computing in a primary school setting.
Smith, Malcolm+2 more
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This chapter discusses teaching science and computing in a primary school setting.
Smith, Malcolm+2 more
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Proceedings of the IEEE, 1989
The author contends that computers are unprecedented among human inventions in that they are a boon to experimenters and theorists alike. He points out that the power of computers has grown, and their cost has decreased, at a high-exponential rate-over the last 35 years; and the end is not in sight.
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The author contends that computers are unprecedented among human inventions in that they are a boon to experimenters and theorists alike. He points out that the power of computers has grown, and their cost has decreased, at a high-exponential rate-over the last 35 years; and the end is not in sight.
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The science of biomedical computing
Medical Informatics, 19841. IntroductionThis is a remarkably exciting time to be involved professionally in the field of medical informatics. The underlying scientific principles are beginning to be identified and defined, educators are increasingly acknowledging the importance of the field for physicians of the present and future, and the technology itself is growing at rates
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