Cambridge Journals Online

Cambridge Journals Online
Skip to content
Mathematical Structures in Computer Science (2005), 15 : 553-614 Cambridge University Press
Copyright © 2005 Cambridge University Press
doi:10.1017/S0960129505004718
Published online by Cambridge University Press 27 May 2005


Paper

Profunctors, open maps and bisimulation


GIAN LUCA CATTANI a1 and GLYNN WINSKEL a2
a1 DS Data Systems S.p.A., Via Ugozzolo 121/A, I-43100 Parma, Italy. Email: cattanil@dsdata.it.
a2 University of Cambridge Computer Laboratory, Cambridge CB3 0FD, England. Email: gw104@cl.cam.ac.uk.

Article author query
cattani gl   [Google Scholar
winskel g   [Google Scholar
 

Abstract

This paper studies fundamental connections between profunctors (that is, distributors, or bimodules), open maps and bisimulation. In particular, it proves that a colimit preserving functor between presheaf categories (corresponding to a profunctor) preserves open maps and open map bisimulation. Consequently, the composition of profunctors preserves open maps as 2-cells. A guiding idea is the view that profunctors, and colimit preserving functors, are linear maps in a model of classical linear logic. But profunctors, and colimit preserving functors, as linear maps, are too restrictive for many applications. This leads to a study of a range of pseudo-comonads and of how non-linear maps in their co-Kleisli bicategories preserve open maps and bisimulation. The pseudo-comonads considered are based on finite colimit completion, ‘lifting’, and indexed families. The paper includes an appendix summarising the key results on coends, left Kan extensions and the preservation of colimits. One motivation for this work is that it provides a mathematical framework for extending domain theory and denotational semantics of programming languages to the more intricate models, languages and equivalences found in concurrent computation, but the results are likely to have more general applicability because of the ubiquitous nature of profunctors.

(Received April 21 2003)
(Revised August 24 2004)



back to top
Cambridge University Press