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### default.html(section.msp101=current)
<h2>MSP101</h2>
<p>MSP101 is an ongoing series of informal talks given on Wednesday
mornings by visiting academics or members of the MSP group. They are
usually announced on the
<a href="https://lists.cis.strath.ac.uk/mailman/listinfo/msp-interest">
msp-interest</a> mailing-list.</p>
<!--<h2>Upcoming talks</h2>-->
<h2>List of previous talks</h2>
<dl>
<dt>2014-05-28: Graphical algebraic foundations for monad stacks (<a href="http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~ok259/">O. Kammar<a/>)</dt>
<dd>
<p>
Ohad gave an informal overview of his current draft, with the
following abstract:
</p><p>
Haskell incorporates computational effects modularly using
sequences of monad transformers, termed monad stacks. The
current practice is to find the appropriate stack for a given
task using intractable brute force and heuristics. By
restricting attention to algebraic stack combinations, we
provide a linear-time algorithm for generating all the
appropriate monad stacks, or decide no such stacks exist. Our
approach is based on Hyland, Plotkin, and Power’s algebraic
analysis of monad transformers, who propose a graph-theoretical
solution to this problem. We extend their analysis with a
straightforward connection to the modular decomposition of a
graph and to cographs, a.k.a. series-parallel graphs.
</p><p>
We present an accessible and self-contained account of this
monad-stack generation problem, and, more generally, of the
decomposition of a combined algebraic theory into sums and
tensors, and its algorithmic solution. We provide a web-tool
implementing this algorithm intended for semantic investigations
of effect combinations and for monad stack generation.
</p>
</dd>
</dl>
<dl>
<dt>2014-05-21: Coalgebraic Foundations of Databases (C. Kupke)</dt>
<dd>
This 101 is intended to be a brainstorming session on possible
links between the theory of coalgebras and the theory of
databases. I will outline some ideas in this direction and I am
looking forward to your feedback.
</dd>
</dl>
<dl>
<dt>2014-05-14: Resource aware contexts and proof search for IMLL (G. Allais)</dt>
<dd>
<p>In Intuitionistic Multiplicative Linear Logic, the right
introduction rule for tensors implies picking a 2-partition of the
set of assumptions and use each component to inhabit the
corresponding tensor's subformulas. This makes a naïve proof search
algorithm intractable. Building a notion of resource availability
in the context and massaging the calculus into a more general one
handling both resource consumption and a notion of "leftovers" of a
subproof allows for a well-structured well-typed by construction
proof search mechanism.</p>
<p>Here is an <a href="http://gallais.org/code/LinearProofSearch/poc.LinearProofSearch.html">Agda file</a> implementing the proof search algorithm.</p>
</dd>
</dl>
<dl>
<dt>2014-04-07: Nominal sets (<a href="http://www.gabbay.org.uk/">J. Gabbay<a/>)</dt>
</dl>
<dl>
<dt>2014-04-02: Towards cubical type theory (<a href="http://www.cs.nott.ac.uk/~txa/">T. Altenkirch<a/>)</dt>
</dl>
<dl>
<dt>2014-03-19: The selection monad transformer (G. Allais)</dt>
<dd>
Guillaume presented parts of Hedges' paper <a href="http://www.eecs.qmul.ac.uk/~julesh/papers/monad_transformers.pdf">Monad
transformers for backtracking search</a> (accepted
to <a href="http://www.cs.bham.ac.uk/~pbl/msfp2014/">MSFP
2014</a>). The paper extends Escardo and Oliva's work on the
selection and continuation monads to the corresponding monad
transformers, with applications to backtracking search and game
theory.
</dd>
</dl>
<dl>
<dt>2014-03-05, 3pm: Lagrange Inversion (S. Hannah)</dt>
<dd>
Stuart spoke about Lagrange inversion, a species-theoretic attempt to discuss the existence of solutions to equations defining species.
</dd>
</dl>
<dl>
<dt>2014-02-28, 2pm: Species (N. Ghani)</dt>
<dd>
Neil spoke about how adding structured quotients to containers
gives rise to a larger class of data types.
</dd>
</dl>
<dl>
<dt>2014-02-19: Synthetic Differential Geometry (T. Revell)</dt>
<dd>
Tim gave a brief introduction to Synthetic Differential
Geometry. This is an attempt to treat smooth spaces categorically
so we can extend the categorical methods used in the discrete
world of computer science to the continuous work of physics.
</dd>
</dl>
<dl>
<dt>2014-02-12: Worlds (C. McBride)</dt>
<dd>
Conor talked about worlds (aka phases, aka times, ...): why one
might bother, and how we might go about equipping type theory with
a generic notion of permitted information flow.
</dd>
</dl>
<dl>
<dt>2014-02-05: Operads (M. Gould)</dt>
<dd>
Miles Gould has kindly agreed to come through and tell us about
Operads, thus revisiting the topic of his PhD and the city in
which he did it.
</dd>
</dl>
<dl>
<dt>2014-01-22: Overview of (extensions of) inductive-recursive definitions (L. Malatesta)</dt>
<dd>
</dd>
<dt>2014-01-08: On the recently found inconsistency of the
univalence axiom in current Agda and Coq (C. McBride)</dt>
<dd>
</dd>
<dt>2013-12-18: Quantum Mechanics (R. Duncan)</dt>
<dd>
</dd>
<dt>2013-11-20: Classical Type Theories (R. Adams)</dt>
<dd>
In 1987, Felleisen showed how to add control operators (for things like
exceptions and unconditional jumps) to the untyped lambda-calculus. In
1990, Griffin idly wondered what would happen if one did the same in a
typed lambda calculus. The answer came out: the inhabited types become
the theorems of classical logic.<br />
I will present the lambda mu-calculus, one of the cleanest attempts to
add control operators to a type theory. We'll cover the good news: the
inhabited types are the tautologies of minimal classical logic, and Godel's
Double Negation translation from classical to intuitionistic logic turns
into the CPS translation.<br />
And the bad news: control operators don't play well with other types. Add
natural numbers (or some other inductive type), and you get inconsistency.
Add Sigma-types, and you get degeneracy (any two objects of the same type
are definitionally equal). It gets worse: add plus-types, and you break
Subject Reduction.
</dd>
<dt>2013-11-13: Continuation Passing Style (G. Allais)</dt>
<dd>
I chose to go through (parts of) Hatcliff and Danvy's paper
<a href="http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=178053">
"A Generic Account of Continuation-Passing Styles"</a> (POPL 94)
which gives a nice factorization of various CPS transforms in
terms of:
<ul>
<li>embeddings from STLC to Moggi's computational meta-language
(either call-by-value, call-by-name, or whatever you can come
up with)</li>
<li>followed by a generic CPS transform transporting terms from ML
back to STLC</li>
</ul>
Here is <a href="http://gallais.org/code/GenericCPS/definitions.html">an Agda
file</a> containing what we had the time to see.
</dd>
</dl>