Approximate string matching (3) | ![]() |
Computation (100) | ![]() |
Computer architecture (25) | ![]() |
Computer programming (826) | ![]() |
Computer science (331) | ![]() |
Distributed computing (29) | ![]() |
Formal language (13) | ![]() |
Theory of computation (3) | ![]() |
G#3v 7753 Formal language 0#4#formal language Formal language G#3v 7754 Theory of computation 0#4#theory of computation Theory of computation
G#2v 7755 Computing G#3v 7756 Booting 0#4#booting Booting 0#4#booting up Booting
Formal languages that Evolve and Proliferate Social Constructivism Multiple and Subjective Descriptions Open source in Digital Ecosystems 17
which is represented through a variety of continuously evolving (natural and formal languages and protocols  the architectural infrastructure that enables the desired âoeautopoieticâ mechanisms
Formal languages that Evolve and Proliferate The issue of how distributed knowledge should be represented -and created-is one of the main research topics
focus of many scientists in recent years has in fact been to develop formal languages that have the expressive power
tree24 of formal languages: new and more complex languages appear in the digital ecosystem, whilst the older ones
and we apply these insights to the digital world and to formal languages, we gain powerful
The formal languages used have a high expressive power, but due to their complexity the codiï cation requires mediation by experts.
formal languages; however, being much easier to write, they are made eï ectively by the users, and the ecosystems
and (iii) the diï erences between formal languages and models and those used in industrial design and development environments (e g.,
This work uses OWL as formal language for this communication, as the OWL was adopted by a considerable number of initiatives
< Back - Next >
Overtext Web Module V3.0 Alpha
Copyright Semantic-Knowledge, 1994-2011