1,450 research outputs found
Bounded time computation on metric spaces and Banach spaces
We extend the framework by Kawamura and Cook for investigating computational
complexity for operators occurring in analysis. This model is based on
second-order complexity theory for functions on the Baire space, which is
lifted to metric spaces by means of representations. Time is measured in terms
of the length of the input encodings and the required output precision. We
propose the notions of a complete representation and of a regular
representation. We show that complete representations ensure that any
computable function has a time bound. Regular representations generalize
Kawamura and Cook's more restrictive notion of a second-order representation,
while still guaranteeing fast computability of the length of the encodings.
Applying these notions, we investigate the relationship between purely metric
properties of a metric space and the existence of a representation such that
the metric is computable within bounded time. We show that a bound on the
running time of the metric can be straightforwardly translated into size bounds
of compact subsets of the metric space. Conversely, for compact spaces and for
Banach spaces we construct a family of admissible, complete, regular
representations that allow for fast computation of the metric and provide short
encodings. Here it is necessary to trade the time bound off against the length
of encodings
Computational Problems in Metric Fixed Point Theory and their Weihrauch Degrees
We study the computational difficulty of the problem of finding fixed points
of nonexpansive mappings in uniformly convex Banach spaces. We show that the
fixed point sets of computable nonexpansive self-maps of a nonempty, computably
weakly closed, convex and bounded subset of a computable real Hilbert space are
precisely the nonempty, co-r.e. weakly closed, convex subsets of the domain. A
uniform version of this result allows us to determine the Weihrauch degree of
the Browder-Goehde-Kirk theorem in computable real Hilbert space: it is
equivalent to a closed choice principle, which receives as input a closed,
convex and bounded set via negative information in the weak topology and
outputs a point in the set, represented in the strong topology. While in finite
dimensional uniformly convex Banach spaces, computable nonexpansive mappings
always have computable fixed points, on the unit ball in infinite-dimensional
separable Hilbert space the Browder-Goehde-Kirk theorem becomes
Weihrauch-equivalent to the limit operator, and on the Hilbert cube it is
equivalent to Weak Koenig's Lemma. In particular, computable nonexpansive
mappings may not have any computable fixed points in infinite dimension. We
also study the computational difficulty of the problem of finding rates of
convergence for a large class of fixed point iterations, which generalise both
Halpern- and Mann-iterations, and prove that the problem of finding rates of
convergence already on the unit interval is equivalent to the limit operator.Comment: 44 page
Proof mining in metric fixed point theory and ergodic theory
In this survey we present some recent applications of proof mining to the
fixed point theory of (asymptotically) nonexpansive mappings and to the
metastability (in the sense of Terence Tao) of ergodic averages in uniformly
convex Banach spaces.Comment: appeared as OWP 2009-05, Oberwolfach Preprints; 71 page
Computability and analysis: the legacy of Alan Turing
We discuss the legacy of Alan Turing and his impact on computability and
analysis.Comment: 49 page
Ultraproducts and metastability
Given a convergence theorem in analysis, under very general conditions a
model-theoretic compactness argument implies that there is a uniform bound on
the rate of metastability. We illustrate with three examples from ergodic
theory
Revising Type-2 Computation and Degrees of Discontinuity
By the sometimes so-called MAIN THEOREM of Recursive Analysis, every
computable real function is necessarily continuous. Weihrauch and Zheng
(TCS'2000), Brattka (MLQ'2005), and Ziegler (ToCS'2006) have considered
different relaxed notions of computability to cover also discontinuous
functions. The present work compares and unifies these approaches. This is
based on the concept of the JUMP of a representation: both a TTE-counterpart to
the well known recursion-theoretic jump on Kleene's Arithmetical Hierarchy of
hypercomputation: and a formalization of revising computation in the sense of
Shoenfield.
We also consider Markov and Banach/Mazur oracle-computation of discontinuous
fu nctions and characterize the computational power of Type-2 nondeterminism to
coincide with the first level of the Analytical Hierarchy.Comment: to appear in Proc. CCA'0
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