| I. Phillips. Refusal testing. Theoretical Computer Sci., 50:241--284, 1987. |
....equivalence. For example, a process that simply performs an action a and then stops ought to be the same as one that has several different ways of doing a s and then stopping, since one a or stopped process is the same as another. A wide variety of notions of equivalence have been proposed, e.g.[28,31,20,5,21,27,41], appropriate for different kinds of process algebras and conceptual settings. Process equivalences can be partially ordered by fineness: finer notions make more distinctions between processes; coarser ones consider more processes identical. Both fine and coarse notions are useful in theory and ....
I. Phillips. Refusal testing. Theoretical Computer Sci., 50:241--284, 1987.
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