Published April 2, 2019
| Version v1
Publication
Membrane Systems with Marked Membranes
Description
Membrane computing is a biologically inspired computational paradigm. Motivated by brane calculi we
investigate membrane systems which differ from conventional membrane systems by the following features:
(1) biomolecules (proteins) can move through the regions of the systems, and can attach onto (and de-attach
from) membranes, and (2) membranes can evolve depending on the attached molecules. The evolution of
membranes is performed by using rules that are motivated by the operation of pinocytosis (the pino rule)
and the operation of cellular dripping (the drip rule) that take place in living cells.
We show that such membrane systems are computationally universal. We also show that if only the second
feature is used then one can generate at least the family of Parikh images of the languages generated by
programmed grammars without appearance checking (which contains non-semilinear sets of vectors).
If, moreover, the use of pino/drip rules is non-cooperative (i.e., not dependent on the proteins attached
to membranes), then one generates a family of sets of vectors that is strictly included in the family of
semilinear sets of vectors.
We also consider a number of decision problems concerning reachability of configurations and boundness.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- https://idus.us.es/handle//11441/85036
- URN
- urn:oai:idus.us.es:11441/85036
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- USE