Randomness for computable measures and initial segment complexity (Q508835): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 09:16, 13 July 2024

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Randomness for computable measures and initial segment complexity
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    Randomness for computable measures and initial segment complexity (English)
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    8 February 2017
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    The paper studies the growth rates of the Kolmogorov complexity of initial segments of proper sequences, i.e. sequences that are random with respect to some computable measure on \(2^{\omega}\). There are four main results: {\parindent=7mm \begin{itemize}\item[(1)] the initial segment complexity of a proper sequence \(X\) is bounded from below by a computable function iff \(X\) is random with respect to some computable, continuous measure; \item[(2)] there is a family of complex sequences that are random with respect to a single computable measure such that for every computable, continuous measure \(\mu\), some sequence in this family fails to be random with respect to \(\mu\); \item[(3)] there are proper sequences with extremely slow-growing initial segment complexity; \item[(4)] various facts about the Turing degrees of proper sequences. \end{itemize}} All results are properly explained and proved in detail.
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    computable measures
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    random sequences
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    complex sequences
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    atomic measures
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    trivial measures
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    diminutive measures
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