References

  1. Edwin Beggs, José Félix Costa, Bruno Loff & John V. Tucker (2008): Oracles and advice as measurements. Lecture Notes in Comput. Sci. 5204. Springer, Berlin, doi:10.1007/978-3-540-85194-3_6.
  2. Edwin Beggs, José Félix Costa, Diogo Poças & John V. Tucker (2013): Oracles that measure thresholds: the Turing machine and the broken balance. J. Logic Comput. 23(6), pp. 1155–1181, doi:10.1093/logcom/ext047.
  3. Edwin Beggs, José Félix Costa, Diogo Poças & John V. Tucker (2014): An analogue-digital Church-Turing thesis. Internat. J. Found. Comput. Sci. 25(4), pp. 373–389, doi:10.1142/S0129054114400012.
  4. Edwin J. Beggs, José Félix Costa & John V. Tucker (2012): The impact of models of a physical oracle on computational power. Math. Structures Comput. Sci. 22(5), pp. 853–879, doi:10.1017/S0960129511000557.
  5. Edwin J. Beggs & John V. Tucker (2007): Can Newtonian systems, bounded in space, time, mass and energy compute all functions?. Theoret. Comput. Sci. 371(1-2), pp. 4–19, doi:10.1016/j.tcs.2006.10.010.
  6. Clare Horsman, Susan Stepney, Rob C Wagner & Viv Kendon (2014): When does a physical system compute?. In: Proc. R. Soc. A 470. The Royal Society, pp. 20140182, doi:10.1098/rspa.2014.0182.
  7. Jan Komorowski, Zdzisław Pawlak, Lech Polkowski & Andrzej Skowron (1999): Rough sets: a tutorial. Rough fuzzy hybridization: A new trend in decision-making, pp. 3–98, doi:10.1.1.37.2477.
  8. Klaus Weihrauch (2000): Computable analysis. Texts in Theoretical Computer Science. An EATCS Series. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, doi:10.1007/978-3-642-56999-9.

Comments and questions to: eptcs@eptcs.org
For website issues: webmaster@eptcs.org