Fundamental Concepts In Computer Science
By Erol Gelenbe & Jean-Pierre Kahane
- Release Date: 2009-02-06
- Genre: Computers
This book presents fundamental contributions to computer science as written and recounted by those who made the contributions themselves. As such, it is a highly original approach to a “living history” of the field of computer science. The scope of the book is broad in that it covers all aspects of computer science, going from the theory of computation, the theory of programming, and the theory of computer system performance, all the way to computer hardware and to major numerical applications of computers.
Contents:Böhm's Theorem (S Guerrini et al.)Membrane Computing: History and Brief Introduction (G Paun)Critique of Computational Reason in the Natural Sciences (G Longo)Deterministic Computation with Random G-Networks (E Gelenbe et al.)Assertions: A Personal Perspective (T Hoare)The Call to ARMs (S Furber)Carl Adam Petri and “Petri Nets” (W Brauer & W Reisig)From Stochastic Modeling to Operational Analysis: The Journey Begins (J P Buzen)From Rocket Control to Virtual Design (O Pironneau)
Readership: Graduate students, academics, and professionals in the field of computer science.