Logic Colloquium '02 2017
DOI: 10.1017/9781316755723.016
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Martin-Löf random and PA-complete sets

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Cited by 31 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…A distinctive feature of Kučera's work has always been that the theory of Martin-Löf random degrees is developed in parallel to the theory of PA degrees, with the techniques in the two topics being intrinsically connected. A definitive result about the relation between the PA degrees and the Martin-Löf random degrees (extending previous work of Kučera) was shown by Frank Stephan in [Ste06] and says that a PA degree is Martin-Löf random iff it computes the halting problem. As discussed in [Ste06] this result strongly suggests a dichotomy of the Martin-Löf random degrees to the ones which contain a lot of information (they compute the halting problem) and the ones which are computationally weak, in the sense that they are not PA.…”
supporting
confidence: 58%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…A distinctive feature of Kučera's work has always been that the theory of Martin-Löf random degrees is developed in parallel to the theory of PA degrees, with the techniques in the two topics being intrinsically connected. A definitive result about the relation between the PA degrees and the Martin-Löf random degrees (extending previous work of Kučera) was shown by Frank Stephan in [Ste06] and says that a PA degree is Martin-Löf random iff it computes the halting problem. As discussed in [Ste06] this result strongly suggests a dichotomy of the Martin-Löf random degrees to the ones which contain a lot of information (they compute the halting problem) and the ones which are computationally weak, in the sense that they are not PA.…”
supporting
confidence: 58%
“…A definitive result about the relation between the PA degrees and the Martin-Löf random degrees (extending previous work of Kučera) was shown by Frank Stephan in [Ste06] and says that a PA degree is Martin-Löf random iff it computes the halting problem. As discussed in [Ste06] this result strongly suggests a dichotomy of the Martin-Löf random degrees to the ones which contain a lot of information (they compute the halting problem) and the ones which are computationally weak, in the sense that they are not PA. In Section 2 we reveal another connection between these classes of degrees: every PA degree is the least upper bound of two Martin-Löf random degrees.…”
supporting
confidence: 58%
“…However, this is only a partial answer to the question. A theorem of Stephan's [34] establishes a dichotomy between two kinds of random sets. On the one hand, those randoms that compute H 1 , the complete ones, pass all the relevant statistical tests (the effective null classes) not because they are in some way typical, but because their strong information content allows them mimic typical sets.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Stephan proved that any Martin-Löf random degree that is also a PA degree must Turing compute ∅ [21]. (Recall that a degree is PA if it computes a complete extension of Peano arithmetic.)…”
Section: Definition 12 ([1])mentioning
confidence: 99%