A Hierarchy of Turing Degrees A Transfinite Hierarchy of Lowness Notions in the Computably Enumerable Degrees, Unifying Classes, and Natural Definability (AMS-206)

Computability theory is a branch of mathematical logic and computer science that has become increasingly relevant in recent years. The field has developed growing connections in diverse areas of mathematics, with applications suitable to topology, group theory, and other subfields. -- In A Hierarchy...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Downey, Rod
Other Authors: Greenberg, Noam
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Princeton ; Oxford Princeton University Press 2020
Series:Annals of Mathematics Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: DeGruyter MPG Collection - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
Description
Summary:Computability theory is a branch of mathematical logic and computer science that has become increasingly relevant in recent years. The field has developed growing connections in diverse areas of mathematics, with applications suitable to topology, group theory, and other subfields. -- In A Hierarchy of Turing Degrees, Rod Downey and Noam Greenberg introduce a new hierarchy that allows them to classify the combinatorics of constructions from many areas of computability theory, including algorithmic randomness, Turing degrees, effectively closed sets, and effective structure theory. This unifying hierarchy gives rise to new natural definability results for Turing degree classes, demonstrating how dynamic constructions become reflected in definability. Downey and Greenberg present numerous construction techniques involving high-level nonuniform arguments, and their self-contained work is appropriate for graduate students and researchers. -- Blending traditional and modern research results in computability theory, A Hierarchy of Turing Degrees establishes novel directions in the field.
Physical Description:240 Seiten
ISBN:978-0-691-20021-7