•  28
    The Equivalence of Definitions of Algorithmic Randomness
    Philosophia Mathematica 29 (2). 2021.
    In this paper, I evaluate the claim that the equivalence of multiple intensionally distinct definitions of random sequence provides evidence for the claim that these definitions capture the intuitive conception of randomness, concluding that the former claim is false. I then develop an alternative account of the significance of randomness-theoretic equivalence results, arguing that they are instances of a phenomenon I refer to as schematic equivalence. On my account, this alternative approach ha…Read more
  •  26
    Demuth’s path to randomness
    with Antonín Kučera and André Nies
    Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 21 (3): 270-305. 2015.
    Osvald Demuth studied constructive analysis from the viewpoint of the Russian school of constructive mathematics. In the course of his work he introduced various notions of effective null set which, when phrased in classical language, yield a number of major algorithmic randomness notions. In addition, he proved several results connecting constructive analysis and randomness that were rediscovered only much later.In this paper, we trace the path that took Demuth from his constructivist roots to …Read more
  •  25
    Randomness and Semimeasures
    with Laurent Bienvenu, Rupert Hölzl, and Paul Shafer
    Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 58 (3): 301-328. 2017.
    A semimeasure is a generalization of a probability measure obtained by relaxing the additivity requirement to superadditivity. We introduce and study several randomness notions for left-c.e. semimeasures, a natural class of effectively approximable semimeasures induced by Turing functionals. Among the randomness notions we consider, the generalization of weak 2-randomness to left-c.e. semimeasures is the most compelling, as it best reflects Martin-Löf randomness with respect to a computable meas…Read more
  •  21
    Randomness for computable measures and initial segment complexity
    with Rupert Hölzl
    Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 168 (4): 860-886. 2017.
  •  21
    On the interplay between effective notions of randomness and genericity
    with Laurent Bienvenu
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 84 (1): 393-407. 2019.
    In this paper, we study the power and limitations of computing effectively generic sequences using effectively random oracles. Previously, it was known that every 2-random sequence computes a 1-generic sequence and every 2-random sequence forms a minimal pair in the Turing degrees with every 2-generic sequence. We strengthen these results by showing that every Demuth random sequence computes a 1-generic sequence and that every Demuth random sequence forms a minimal pair with every pb-generic seq…Read more
  •  18
    Deep classes
    with Laurent Bienvenu
    Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 22 (2): 249-286. 2016.
    A set of infinite binary sequences ${\cal C} \subseteq 2$ℕ is negligible if there is no partial probabilistic algorithm that produces an element of this set with positive probability. The study of negligibility is of particular interest in the context of ${\rm{\Pi }}_1^0 $ classes. In this paper, we introduce the notion of depth for ${\rm{\Pi }}_1^0 $ classes, which is a stronger form of negligibility. Whereas a negligible ${\rm{\Pi }}_1^0 $ class ${\cal C}$ has the property that one cannot prob…Read more
  •  10
    Degrees of randomized computability
    with Rupert Hölzl
    Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 28 (1): 27-70. 2022.
    In this survey we discuss work of Levin and V’yugin on collections of sequences that are non-negligible in the sense that they can be computed by a probabilistic algorithm with positive probability. More precisely, Levin and V’yugin introduced an ordering on collections of sequences that are closed under Turing equivalence. Roughly speaking, given two such collections $\mathcal {A}$ and $\mathcal {B}$, $\mathcal {A}$ is below $\mathcal {B}$ in this ordering if $\mathcal {A}\setminus \mathcal {B}…Read more
  •  6
    DEEP ${\rm{\Pi }}_1^0 $ CLASSES
    with Laurent Bienvenu
    Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 22 (2): 249-286. 2016.
  •  5
    Rank and randomness
    with Rupert Hölzl
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 84 (4): 1527-1543. 2019.
    We show that for each computable ordinal $\alpha > 0$ it is possible to find in each Martin-Löf random ${\rm{\Delta }}_2^0 $ degree a sequence R of Cantor-Bendixson rank α, while ensuring that the sequences that inductively witness R’s rank are all Martin-Löf random with respect to a single countably supported and computable measure. This is a strengthening for random degrees of a recent result of Downey, Wu, and Yang, and can be understood as a randomized version of it.