English

Neighbourhood Structures: Bisimilarity and Basic Model Theory

Logic in Computer Science 2015-07-01 v4

Abstract

Neighbourhood structures are the standard semantic tool used to reason about non-normal modal logics. The logic of all neighbourhood models is called classical modal logic. In coalgebraic terms, a neighbourhood frame is a coalgebra for the contravariant powerset functor composed with itself, denoted by 2^2. We use this coalgebraic modelling to derive notions of equivalence between neighbourhood structures. 2^2-bisimilarity and behavioural equivalence are well known coalgebraic concepts, and they are distinct, since 2^2 does not preserve weak pullbacks. We introduce a third, intermediate notion whose witnessing relations we call precocongruences (based on pushouts). We give back-and-forth style characterisations for 2^2-bisimulations and precocongruences, we show that on a single coalgebra, precocongruences capture behavioural equivalence, and that between neighbourhood structures, precocongruences are a better approximation of behavioural equivalence than 2^2-bisimulations. We also introduce a notion of modal saturation for neighbourhood models, and investigate its relationship with definability and image-finiteness. We prove a Hennessy-Milner theorem for modally saturated and for image-finite neighbourhood models. Our main results are an analogue of Van Benthem's characterisation theorem and a model-theoretic proof of Craig interpolation for classical modal logic.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0901.4430,
  title  = {Neighbourhood Structures: Bisimilarity and Basic Model Theory},
  author = {Helle Hvid Hansen and Clemens Kupke and Eric Pacuit},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0901.4430},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

uses LMCS.cls (included), 2 figures (both ps and pdf)

R2 v1 2026-06-21T12:05:28.150Z