•  1
    Effectively and Noneffectively Nowhere Simple Sets
    Mathematical Logic Quarterly 42 (1): 241-248. 2006.
    R. Shore proved that every recursively enumerable (r. e.) set can be split into two (disjoint) nowhere simple sets. Splitting theorems play an important role in recursion theory since they provide information about the lattice ϵ of all r. e. sets. Nowhere simple sets were further studied by D. Miller and J. Remmel, and we generalize some of their results. We characterize r. e. sets which can be split into two (non) effectively nowhere simple sets, and r. e. sets which can be split into two r. e.…Read more
  •  2
    Regular Relations and the Quantifier “There Exist Uncountably Many”
    with Zarko Mijajlović
    Mathematical Logic Quarterly 29 (3): 151-161. 2006.
  •  65
    Belegradek, O., Verbovskiy, V. and Wagner, FO, Coset
    with J. Y. Halpern, B. M. Kapron, U. Kohlenbach, P. Oliva, F. Lucas, B. Luttik, P. Matet, and M. Pourmahdian
    Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 121 (1): 287. 2003.
  •  57
    Interpreting a Field in its Heisenberg Group
    with Rachael Alvir, Wesley Calvert, Grant Goodman, Julia Knight, Russell Miller, Andrey Morozov, Alexandra Soskova, and Rose Weisshaar
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 87 (3): 1215-1230. 2022.
    We improve on and generalize a 1960 result of Maltsev. For a field F, we denote by $H(F)$ the Heisenberg group with entries in F. Maltsev showed that there is a copy of F defined in $H(F)$, using existential formulas with an arbitrary non-commuting pair of elements as parameters. We show that F is interpreted in $H(F)$ using computable $\Sigma _1$ formulas with no parameters. We give two proofs. The first is an existence proof, relying on a result of Harrison-Trainor, Melnikov, R. Miller, and Mo…Read more
  •  189
    Enumerations in computable structure theory
    with Sergey Goncharov, Julia Knight, Charles McCoy, Russell Miller, and Reed Solomon
    Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 136 (3): 219-246. 2005.
    We exploit properties of certain directed graphs, obtained from the families of sets with special effective enumeration properties, to generalize several results in computable model theory to higher levels of the hyperarithmetical hierarchy. Families of sets with such enumeration features were previously built by Selivanov, Goncharov, and Wehner. For a computable successor ordinal α, we transform a countable directed graph into a structure such that has a isomorphic copy if and only if has a com…Read more
  •  148
    Sequences of n-diagrams
    with Julia Knight and Andrei Morozov
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 67 (3): 1227-1247. 2002.
  • Downey, R., Fiiredi, Z., Jockusch Jr., CG and Ruhel, LA
    with W. I. Gasarch, A. C. Y. Lee, M. Groszek, T. Hummel, H. Ishihara, B. Khoussainov, A. Nerode, I. Kalantari, and L. Welch
    Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 93 263. 1998.
  •  28
    Generically computable linear orderings
    with Wesley Calvert, Douglas Cenzer, and David Gonzalez
    Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 176 (8): 103612. 2025.
  •  75
    Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA May 19–23, 2004
    with John Baldwin, Lev Beklemishev, Michael Hallett, Steve Jackson, Kenneth Kunen, Angus J. MacIntyre, Penelope Maddy, Joe Miller, and Michael Rathjen
    Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 11 (1). 2005.
  •  20
    Mathematical logic is the study of reasoning about mathematical objects and the degree to which mathematical and scientific reasoning can be formalized and mechanized. Logic provides the foundations of mathematics and of theoretical computer science. Classical logic defined truth, developed the theory of infinite numbers, resolved paradoxes of naive set theory, defined what an algorithm is, and established that certain mathematical principles are independent from the rest of mathematics. Modern …Read more
  •  65
    Computability Theory
    with Keshav Srinivasan and Dario Verta
    In Bharath Sriraman (ed.), Handbook of the History and Philosophy of Mathematical Practice, Springer Verlag. pp. 1933-1961. 2024.
    Computability theory is the mathematical theory of algorithms, which explores the power and limitations of computation. Classical computability theory formalized the intuitive notion of an algorithm and provided a theoretical basis for digital computers. It also demonstrated the limitations of algorithms and showed that most sets of natural numbers and the problems they encode are not decidable (Turing computable). Important results of modern computability theory include the classification of th…Read more
  •  19
    In 1934, Skolem gave a remarkable construction of a countable nonstandard model of arithmetic. His construction contains ideas of the ultrapower construction which was introduced in model theory 20 years later. However, typical ultrapower constructions produce uncountable models. Skolem’s construction can also be connected with ideas from computability theory, formalized by Turing and others in 1936. The proof of one of Skolem’s key statements can be interpreted using computability-theoretic not…Read more
  •  72
    Cohesive powers of structures
    Archive for Mathematical Logic 63 (5): 679-702. 2024.
    A cohesive power of a structure is an effective analog of the classical ultrapower of a structure. We start with a computable structure, and consider its effective power over a cohesive set of natural numbers. A cohesive set is an infinite set of natural numbers that is indecomposable with respect to computably enumerable sets. It plays the role of an ultrafilter, and the elements of a cohesive power are the equivalence classes of certain partial computable functions determined by the cohesive s…Read more
  •  97
    On Cohesive Powers of Linear Orders
    with Rumen Dimitrov, Andrey Morozov, Paul Shafer, Alexandra A. Soskova, and Stefan V. Vatev
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 88 (3): 947-1004. 2023.
    Cohesive powersof computable structures are effective analogs of ultrapowers, where cohesive sets play the role of ultrafilters. Let$\omega $,$\zeta $, and$\eta $denote the respective order-types of the natural numbers, the integers, and the rationals when thought of as linear orders. We investigate the cohesive powers of computable linear orders, with special emphasis on computable copies of$\omega $. If$\mathcal {L}$is a computable copy of$\omega $that is computably isomorphic to the usual pre…Read more
  •  74
    On the isomorphism problem for some classes of computable algebraic structures
    with Steffen Lempp, Charles F. D. McCoy, Andrei S. Morozov, and Reed Solomon
    Archive for Mathematical Logic 61 (5): 813-825. 2022.
    We establish that the isomorphism problem for the classes of computable nilpotent rings, distributive lattices, nilpotent groups, and nilpotent semigroups is \-complete, which is as complicated as possible. The method we use is based on uniform effective interpretations of computable binary relations into computable structures from the corresponding algebraic classes.
  •  25
    Logic and Algebraic Structures in Quantum Computing (edited book)
    with Jennifer Chubb and Ali Eskandarian
    Cambridge University Press. 2014.
    Experts in the field explore the connections across physics, quantum logic, and quantum computing.
  •  80
    2005–06 Winter Meeting of the Association for Symbolic Logic
    Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 12 (4): 613-624. 2006.
  •  63
    Computability-theoretic categoricity and Scott families
    with Ekaterina Fokina and Daniel Turetsky
    Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 170 (6): 699-717. 2019.
  • Induction, algorithmic learning theory, and philosophy (edited book)
    with Michele Friend and Norma B. Goethe
    Springer. 2007.
  •  93
    Σ 1 0 and Π 1 0 equivalence structures
    with Douglas Cenzer and Jeffrey B. Remmel
    Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 162 (7): 490-503. 2011.
    We study computability theoretic properties of and equivalence structures and how they differ from computable equivalence structures or equivalence structures that belong to the Ershov difference hierarchy. Our investigation includes the complexity of isomorphisms between equivalence structures and between equivalence structures.
  •  68
    Partial automorphism semigroups
    with Jennifer Chubb, Andrei S. Morozov, Sarah Pingrey, and Eric Ufferman
    Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 156 (2): 245-258. 2008.
    We study the relationship between algebraic structures and their inverse semigroups of partial automorphisms. We consider a variety of classes of natural structures including equivalence structures, orderings, Boolean algebras, and relatively complemented distributive lattices. For certain subsemigroups of these inverse semigroups, isomorphism of the subsemigroups yields isomorphism of the underlying structures. We also prove that for some classes of computable structures, we can reconstruct a c…Read more
  •  120
    Bounding Homogeneous Models
    with Barbara F. Csima, Denis R. Hirschfeldt, and Robert I. Soare
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 72 (1): 305-323. 2007.
    A Turing degree d is homogeneous bounding if every complete decidable (CD) theory has a d-decidable homogeneous model A, i.e., the elementary diagram De (A) has degree d. It follows from results of Macintyre and Marker that every PA degree (i.e., every degree of a complete extension of Peano Arithmetic) is homogeneous bounding. We prove that in fact a degree is homogeneous bounding if and only if it is a PA degree. We do this by showing that there is a single CD theory T such that every homogene…Read more
  •  38
    Regular relations and the quantifier “there exist uncountably many”
    with Zarko Mijajlović
    Mathematical Logic Quarterly 29 (3): 151-161. 1983.
  •  295
    Frequency computations and the cardinality theorem
    with Martin Kummer and Jim Owings
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 57 (2): 682-687. 1992.
  •  143
    Isomorphism relations on computable structures
    with Ekaterina B. Fokina, Sy-David Friedman, Julia F. Knight, Charles Mccoy, and Antonio Montalbán
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 77 (1): 122-132. 2012.
    We study the complexity of the isomorphism relation on classes of computable structures. We use the notion of FF-reducibility introduced in [9] to show completeness of the isomorphism relation on many familiar classes in the context of all ${\mathrm{\Sigma }}_{1}^{1}$ equivalence relations on hyperarithmetical subsets of ω
  •  73
    San Antonio Convention Center San Antonio, Texas January 14–15, 2006
    with Douglas Cenzer, C. Ward Henson, Michael C. Laskowski, Alain Louveau, Russell Miller, Itay Neeman, and Sergei Starchenko
    Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 12 (4). 2006.
  •  75
    The possible turing degree of the nonzero member in a two element degree spectrum
    Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 60 (1): 1-30. 1993.
    We construct a recursive model , a recursive subset R of its domain, and a Turing degree x 0 satisfying the following condition. The nonrecursive images of R under all isomorphisms from to other recursive models are of Turing degree x and cannot be recursively enumerable
  •  101
    Chains and antichains in partial orderings
    with Carl G. Jockusch and Julia F. Knight
    Archive for Mathematical Logic 48 (1): 39-53. 2009.
    We study the complexity of infinite chains and antichains in computable partial orderings. We show that there is a computable partial ordering which has an infinite chain but none that is ${\Sigma _{1}^{1}}$ or ${\Pi _{1}^{1}}$ , and also obtain the analogous result for antichains. On the other hand, we show that every computable partial ordering which has an infinite chain must have an infinite chain that is the difference of two ${\Pi _{1}^{1}}$ sets. Our main result is that there is a computa…Read more
  •  178
    Computability of fraïssé limits
    with Barbara F. Csima, Russell Miller, and Antonio Montalbán
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 76 (1): 66-93. 2011.
    Fraïssé studied countable structures S through analysis of the age of S i.e., the set of all finitely generated substructures of S. We investigate the effectiveness of his analysis, considering effectively presented lists of finitely generated structures and asking when such a list is the age of a computable structure. We focus particularly on the Fraïssé limit. We also show that degree spectra of relations on a sufficiently nice Fraïssé limit are always upward closed unless the relation is defi…Read more