Departing from Larsen's concept of parameterized bisimilarity of processes with respect to interaction with environments, we start an exploration of its natural weakening: bisimilarity of unrestricted join interactions with environments. Parameterized bisimilarity relates processes p and q with respect to an environment e if p and q behave bi-similarly while joining -- respectively the same -- transitions from e. The weakened variant relates processes p and q with respect to environment e if the join-interaction processes p & e and q & e of p and q with e are bisimilar. (Hereby join interactions r & f facilitate a step with label a to r' & f' if and only if r and f permit a-steps to r' and f' , respectively.) Join-interaction parameterized (ji-parameterized) bisimilarity coincides with parameterized bisimilarity for deterministic environments, but that it is a coarser equivalence in general. We explain how Larsen's concept can be recovered from ji-parameterized bisimilarity by 'determinizing' interactions. We show that by adaptation to simulatability (simulation preorder) the same concept arises: parameterized simulatability coincides with ji-parameterized simulatability. For the discrimination preorder of (ji-)parameterized simulatability on environments we obtain the same result as Larsen did for parameterized bisimilarity. Also, we give a modal-logic characterization of (ji-)parameterized simulatability. Finally we gather open problems, and provide an outlook on our current related work.
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