scholarly journals LEARNING THEORY IN THE ARITHMETIC HIERARCHY

2014 ◽  
Vol 79 (3) ◽  
pp. 908-927 ◽  
Author(s):  
ACHILLES A. BEROS

AbstractWe consider the arithmetic complexity of index sets of uniformly computably enumerable families learnable under different learning criteria. We determine the exact complexity of these sets for the standard notions of finite learning, learning in the limit, behaviorally correct learning and anomalous learning in the limit. In proving the ${\rm{\Sigma }}_5^0$-completeness result for behaviorally correct learning we prove a result of independent interest; if a uniformly computably enumerable family is not learnable, then for any computable learner there is a ${\rm{\Delta }}_2^0$ enumeration witnessing failure.

2016 ◽  
Vol 81 (4) ◽  
pp. 1375-1395 ◽  
Author(s):  
URI ANDREWS ◽  
ANDREA SORBI

AbstractLet$ \le _c $be computable the reducibility on computably enumerable equivalence relations (or ceers). We show that for every ceerRwith infinitely many equivalence classes, the index sets$\left\{ {i:R_i \le _c R} \right\}$(withRnonuniversal),$\left\{ {i:R_i \ge _c R} \right\}$, and$\left\{ {i:R_i \equiv _c R} \right\}$are${\rm{\Sigma }}_3^0$complete, whereas in caseRhas only finitely many equivalence classes, we have that$\left\{ {i:R_i \le _c R} \right\}$is${\rm{\Pi }}_2^0$complete, and$\left\{ {i:R \ge _c R} \right\}$(withRhaving at least two distinct equivalence classes) is${\rm{\Sigma }}_2^0$complete. Next, solving an open problem from [1], we prove that the index set of the effectively inseparable ceers is${\rm{\Pi }}_4^0$complete. Finally, we prove that the 1-reducibility preordering on c.e. sets is a${\rm{\Sigma }}_3^0$complete preordering relation, a fact that is used to show that the preordering relation$ \le _c $on ceers is a${\rm{\Sigma }}_3^0$complete preordering relation.


2019 ◽  
Vol 85 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
URI ANDREWS ◽  
SERIKZHAN A. BADAEV

AbstractWe examine how degrees of computably enumerable equivalence relations (ceers) under computable reduction break down into isomorphism classes. Two ceers are isomorphic if there is a computable permutation of ω which reduces one to the other. As a method of focusing on nontrivial differences in isomorphism classes, we give special attention to weakly precomplete ceers. For any degree, we consider the number of isomorphism types contained in the degree and the number of isomorphism types of weakly precomplete ceers contained in the degree. We show that the number of isomorphism types must be 1 or ω, and it is 1 if and only if the ceer is self-full and has no computable classes. On the other hand, we show that the number of isomorphism types of weakly precomplete ceers contained in the degree can be any member of $[0,\omega ]$. In fact, for any $n \in [0,\omega ]$, there is a degree d and weakly precomplete ceers ${E_1}, \ldots ,{E_n}$ in d so that any ceer R in d is isomorphic to ${E_i} \oplus D$ for some $i \le n$ and D a ceer with domain either finite or ω comprised of finitely many computable classes. Thus, up to a trivial equivalence, the degree d splits into exactly n classes.We conclude by answering some lingering open questions from the literature: Gao and Gerdes [11] define the collection of essentially FC ceers to be those which are reducible to a ceer all of whose classes are finite. They show that the index set of essentially FC ceers is ${\rm{\Pi }}_3^0$-hard, though the definition is ${\rm{\Sigma }}_4^0$. We close the gap by showing that the index set is ${\rm{\Sigma }}_4^0$-complete. They also use index sets to show that there is a ceer all of whose classes are computable, but which is not essentially FC, and they ask for an explicit construction, which we provide.Andrews and Sorbi [4] examined strong minimal covers of downwards-closed sets of degrees of ceers. We show that if $\left( {{E_i}} \right)$ is a uniform c.e. sequence of non universal ceers, then $\left\{ {{ \oplus _{i \le j}}{E_i}|j \in \omega } \right\}$ has infinitely many incomparable strong minimal covers, which we use to answer some open questions from [4].Lastly, we show that there exists an infinite antichain of weakly precomplete ceers.


2018 ◽  
Vol 83 (3) ◽  
pp. 1229-1246
Author(s):  
TAISHI KURAHASHI

AbstractLet T and U be any consistent theories of arithmetic. If T is computably enumerable, then the provability predicate $P{r_\tau }\left( x \right)$ of T is naturally obtained from each ${{\rm{\Sigma }}_1}$ definition $\tau \left( v \right)$ of T. The provability logic $P{L_\tau }\left( U \right)$ of τ relative to U is the set of all modal formulas which are provable in U under all arithmetical interpretations where □ is interpreted by $P{r_\tau }\left( x \right)$. It was proved by Beklemishev based on the previous studies by Artemov, Visser, and Japaridze that every $P{L_\tau }\left( U \right)$ coincides with one of the logics $G{L_\alpha }$, ${D_\beta }$, ${S_\beta }$, and $GL_\beta ^ -$, where α and β are subsets of ω and β is cofinite.We prove that if U is a computably enumerable consistent extension of Peano Arithmetic and L is one of $G{L_\alpha }$, ${D_\beta }$, ${S_\beta }$, and $GL_\beta ^ -$, where α is computably enumerable and β is cofinite, then there exists a ${{\rm{\Sigma }}_1}$ definition $\tau \left( v \right)$ of some extension of $I{{\rm{\Sigma }}_1}$ such that $P{L_\tau }\left( U \right)$ is exactly L.


2018 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-89 ◽  
Author(s):  
ROD DOWNEY ◽  
NOAM GREENBERG

AbstractWe introduce a new hierarchy of computably enumerable degrees. This hierarchy is based on computable ordinal notations measuring complexity of approximation of${\rm{\Delta }}_2^0$functions. The hierarchy unifies and classifies the combinatorics of a number of diverse constructions in computability theory. It does so along the lines of the high degrees (Martin) and the array noncomputable degrees (Downey, Jockusch, and Stob). The hierarchy also gives a number of natural definability results in the c.e. degrees, including a definable antichain.


2014 ◽  
Vol 79 (01) ◽  
pp. 60-88 ◽  
Author(s):  
URI ANDREWS ◽  
STEFFEN LEMPP ◽  
JOSEPH S. MILLER ◽  
KENG MENG NG ◽  
LUCA SAN MAURO ◽  
...  

Abstract We study computably enumerable equivalence relations (ceers), under the reducibility $R \le S$ if there exists a computable function f such that $x\,R\,y$ if and only if $f\left( x \right)\,\,S\,f\left( y \right)$ , for every $x,y$ . We show that the degrees of ceers under the equivalence relation generated by $\le$ form a bounded poset that is neither a lower semilattice, nor an upper semilattice, and its first-order theory is undecidable. We then study the universal ceers. We show that 1) the uniformly effectively inseparable ceers are universal, but there are effectively inseparable ceers that are not universal; 2) a ceer R is universal if and only if $R\prime \le R$ , where $R\prime$ denotes the halting jump operator introduced by Gao and Gerdes (answering an open question of Gao and Gerdes); and 3) both the index set of the universal ceers and the index set of the uniformly effectively inseparable ceers are ${\rm{\Sigma }}_3^0$ -complete (the former answering an open question of Gao and Gerdes).


Author(s):  
A. J. White

SynopsisIn this paper we consider the problem of defining a convolution, analogous to the classical convolution of scalar measures, of measures defined on the Borel sets of a locally compact semi-groupSand having values in a Banach algebra. Using the bilinearintegral introduced by Bartle we show that the formalism of the scalar case persists in situations of considerable generality so that the formulasuitably interpreted, gives a Banach algebra structure to a large class ofvalued measures defined onS.Themethods exploit the connection between vector measures and operators and involve some results of independent interest.


Author(s):  
Achilles A. Beros ◽  
Konstantinos A. Beros ◽  
Daniel Flores ◽  
Umar Gaffar ◽  
David J. Webb ◽  
...  

1968 ◽  
Vol 20 ◽  
pp. 456-464 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Poland

This paper presents a list of all finite groups having exactly six and seven conjugate classes and an outline of the background necessary for the proof, and gives, in particular, two results which may be of independent interest. In 1903 E. Landau (8) proved, by induction, that for each the equation*has only finitely many solutions over the positive integers.


2010 ◽  
Vol 10 (01n02) ◽  
pp. 83-99 ◽  
Author(s):  
ROD DOWNEY ◽  
STEFFEN LEMPP ◽  
GUOHUA WU

In this paper, we solve a long-standing open question (see, e.g. Downey [6, Sec. 7] and Downey and Moses [11]), about the spectrum of the successivity relation on a computable linear ordering. We show that if a computable linear ordering [Formula: see text] has infinitely many successivities, then the spectrum of the successivity relation is closed upwards in the computably enumerable Turing degrees. To do this, we use a new method of constructing [Formula: see text]-isomorphisms, which has already found other applications such as Downey, Kastermans and Lempp [9] and is of independent interest. It would seem to promise many further applications.


2002 ◽  
Vol 67 (4) ◽  
pp. 1579-1580
Author(s):  
Rodney G. Downey ◽  
Steffen Lempp

A computably enumerable Turing degree a is called contiguous iff it contains only a single computably enumerable weak truth table degree (Ladner and Sasso [2]). In [1], the authors proved that a nonzero computably enumerable degree a is contiguous iff it is locally distributive, that is, for all a1, a2, c with a1 ∪a2 = a and c ≤ a, there exist ci, ≤ ai with c1 ∪ c2 = c.To do this we supposed that W was a computably enumerable set and ∪ a computably set with a Turing functional Φ such that ΦW = U. Then we constructed computably enumerable sets A0, A1 and B together with functionals Γ0, Γ1, Γ, and Δ so thatand so as to satisfy all the requirements below.That is, we built a degree-theoretical splitting A0, A1 of W and a set B ≤TW such that if we cannot beat all possible degree-theoretical splittings V0, V1 of B then we were able to witness the fact that U ≤WW (via Λ).After the proof it was observed that the set U of the proof (page 1222, paragraph 4) needed only to be Δ20. It was then claimed that a consequence to the proof was that every contiguous computably enumerable degree was, in fact, strongly contiguous, in the sense that all (not necessarily computably enumerable) sets of the degree had the same weak truth table degree.


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