Memory Consistency Conditions for Self-Assembly Programming

Computer Science – Data Structures and Algorithms

Scientific paper

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Scientific paper

Perhaps the two most significant theoretical questions about the programming of self-assembling agents are: (1) necessary and sufficient conditions to produce a unique terminal assembly, and (2) error correction. We address both questions, by reducing two well-studied models of tile assembly to models of distributed shared memory (DSM), in order to obtain results from the memory consistency systems induced by tile assembly systems when simulated in the DSM setting. The Abstract Tile Assembly Model (aTAM) can be simulated by a DSM system that obeys causal consistency, and the locally deterministic tile assembly systems in the aTAM correspond exactly to the concurrent-write free programs that simulate tile assembly in such a model. Thus, the detection of the failure of local determinism (which had formerly been an open problem) reduces to the detection of data races in simulating programs. Further, the Kinetic Tile Assembly Model can be simulated by a DSM system that obeys GWO, a memory consistency condition defined by Steinke and Nutt. (To our knowledge, this is the first natural example of a DSM system that obeys GWO, but no stronger consistency condition.) We combine these results with the observation that self-assembly algorithms are local algorithms, and there exists a fast conversion of deterministic local algorithms into deterministic self-stabilizing algorithms. This provides an "immediate" generalization of a theorem by Soloveichik et al. about the existence of tile assembly systems that simultaneously perform two forms of self-stabilization: proofreading and self-healing. Our reductions and proof techniques can be extended to the programming of self-assembling agents in a variety of media, not just DNA tiles, and not just two-dimensional surfaces.

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