Computing is a high-level process of a physical system. Recent interest in non-standard computing systems, including quantum and biological computers, has brought this physical basis of computing to the forefront. There has been, however, no consensus on how to tell if a given physical system is acting as a computer or not; leading to confusion over novel computational devices, and even claims that every physical event is a computation. In this paper, we introduce a formal framework that can be used to determine whether a physical system is performing a computation. We demonstrate how the abstract computational level interacts with the physical device level, in comparison with the use of mathematical models in experimental science. This powerful formulation allows a precise description of experiments, technology, computation and simulation, giving our central conclusion: physical computing is the use of a physical system to predict the outcome of an abstract evolution. We give conditions for computing, illustrated using a range of non-standard computing scenarios. The framework also covers broader computing contexts, where there is no obvious human computer user. We introduce the notion of a ‘computational entity’, and its critical role in defining when computing is taking place in physical systems.
When does a physical system compute?
Clare Horsman,S. Stepney,Rob C. Wagner,V. Kendon
Published 2013 in Proceedings of the Royal Society A
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2013
- Venue
Proceedings of the Royal Society A
- Publication date
2013-09-30
- Fields of study
Medicine, Physics, Computer Science
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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