Characteristic Logics for Behavioural Hemimetrics via Fuzzy Lax Extensions
Paul Wild, Lutz Schr\"oder

TL;DR
This paper develops a unified coalgebraic framework for fuzzy lax extensions and characteristic logics that quantify behavioural distances in systems, generalizing classical bisimulation concepts to fuzzy and hemimetric settings.
Contribution
It shows that all fuzzy lax extensions are Kantorovich extensions for Moss modalities, enabling quantitative modal logics for behavioural distances.
Findings
Fuzzy lax extensions can be characterized as Kantorovich extensions.
Quantitative modal logics can characterize behavioural distances.
Results apply to asymmetric distances (hemimetrics).
Abstract
In systems involving quantitative data, such as probabilistic, fuzzy, or metric systems, behavioural distances provide a more fine-grained comparison of states than two-valued notions of behavioural equivalence or behaviour inclusion. Like in the two-valued case, the wide variation found in system types creates a need for generic methods that apply to many system types at once. Approaches of this kind are emerging within the paradigm of universal coalgebra, based either on lifting pseudometrics along set functors or on lifting general real-valued (fuzzy) relations along functors by means of fuzzy lax extensions. An immediate benefit of the latter is that they allow bounding behavioural distance by means of fuzzy (bi-)simulations that need not themselves be hemi- or pseudometrics; this is analogous to classical simulations and bisimulations, which need not be preorders or equivalence…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Algebra and Logic · Logic, Reasoning, and Knowledge
