Wadge hierarchy explained
In descriptive set theory, within mathematics, Wadge degrees are levels of complexity for sets of reals. Sets are compared by continuous reductions. The Wadge hierarchy is the structure of Wadge degrees. These concepts are named after William W. Wadge.
Wadge degrees
Suppose
and
are subsets of
Baire space ω
ω. Then
is
Wadge reducible to
or
≤
W
if there is a continuous function
on ω
ω with
. The
Wadge order is the
preorder or
quasiorder on the subsets of Baire space.
Equivalence classes of sets under this preorder are called
Wadge degrees, the degree of a set
is denoted by [<math>A</math>]
W. The set of Wadge degrees ordered by the Wadge order is called the
Wadge hierarchy.
Properties of Wadge degrees include their consistency with measures of complexity stated in terms of definability. For example, if
≤
W
and
is a
countable intersection of
open sets, then so is
. The same works for all levels of the
Borel hierarchy and the
difference hierarchy. The Wadge hierarchy plays an important role in models of the
axiom of determinacy. Further interest in Wadge degrees comes from
computer science, where some papers have suggested Wadge degrees are relevant to
algorithmic complexity.
Wadge's lemma states that under the axiom of determinacy (AD), for any two subsets
of Baire space,
≤
W
or
≤
W ω
ω\
.
[1] The assertion that the Wadge lemma holds for sets in Γ is the
semilinear ordering principle for Γ or SLO(Γ). Any defines a linear order on the equivalence classes modulo complements. Wadge's lemma can be applied locally to any
pointclass Γ, for example the
Borel sets,
Δ1n sets,
Σ1n sets, or
Π1n sets. It follows from determinacy of differences of sets in Γ. Since
Borel determinacy is proved in
ZFC, ZFC implies Wadge's lemma for Borel sets.
Wadge's lemma is similar to the cone lemma from computability theory.
Wadge's lemma via Wadge and Lipschitz games
The Wadge game is a simple infinite game used to investigate the notion of continuous reduction for subsets of Baire space. Wadge had analyzed the structure of the Wadge hierarchy for Baire space with games by 1972, but published these results only much later in his PhD thesis. In the Wadge game
, player I and player II each in turn play integers, and the outcome of the game is determined by checking whether the sequences
x and
y generated by players I and II are contained in the sets
A and
B, respectively. Player II wins if the outcome is the same for both players, i.e.
is in
if and only if
is in
. Player I wins if the outcome is different. Sometimes this is also called the
Lipschitz game, and the variant where player II has the option to pass finitely many times is called the Wadge game.
Suppose that the game is determined. If player I has a winning strategy, then this defines a continuous (even Lipschitz) map reducing
to the complement of
, and if on the other hand player II has a winning strategy then you have a reduction of
to
. For example, suppose that player II has a winning strategy. Map every sequence
x to the sequence
y that player II plays in
if player I plays the sequence
x, and player II follows his or her winning strategy. This defines a continuous map
f with the property that
x is in
if and only if
f(
x) is in
.
Structure of the Wadge hierarchy
Martin and Monk proved in 1973 that AD implies the Wadge order for Baire space is well founded. Hence under AD, the Wadge classes modulo complements form a wellorder. The Wadge rank of a set
is the order type of the set of Wadge degrees modulo complements strictly below [<math>A</math>]
W. The length of the Wadge hierarchy has been shown to be
Θ. Wadge also proved that the length of the Wadge hierarchy restricted to the Borel sets is φ
ω1(1) (or φ
ω1(2) depending on the notation), where φ
γ is the
γth Veblen function to the base ω
1 (instead of the usual ω).
As for the Wadge lemma, this holds for any pointclass Γ, assuming the axiom of determinacy. If we associate with each set
the collection of all sets strictly below
on the Wadge hierarchy, this forms a pointclass. Equivalently, for each ordinal
α ≤ θ the collection W
α of sets that show up before stage
α is a
pointclass. Conversely, every pointclass is equal to some
α. A pointclass is said to be
self-dual if it is
closed under complementation. It can be shown that W
α is self-dual if and only if
α is either 0, an
even successor ordinal, or a
limit ordinal of
countable cofinality.
Other notions of degree
Similar notions of reduction and degree arise by replacing the continuous functions by any class of functions F that contains the identity function and is closed under composition. Write
≤
F
if
for some function
in
F. Any such class of functions again determines a
preorder on the subsets of Baire space. Degrees given by
Lipschitz functions are called
Lipschitz degrees, and degrees from Borel functions
Borel–Wadge degrees.
References
- Book: Alexander S. Kechris . Alexander S. Kechris . Benedikt Löwe . John R. Steel. Wadge Degrees and Projective Ordinals: The Cabal Seminar Volume II . Cambridge University Press . Lecture Notes in Logic . 9781139504249. December 2011 .
- Andretta, Alessandro . The SLO principle and the Wadge hierarchy . Bold . Stefan . Benedikt Löwe . Räsch . Thoralf . van Benthem . Johan. 3 . Infinite Games, Papers of the conference "Foundations of the Formal Sciences V" held in Bonn, Nov 26-29, 2004. College Publications. Studies in Logic. 11. 2005-->,2007. 9781904987758. 1–38. .
- Book: Kanamori, Akihiro. Akihiro Kanamori. The Higher Infinite. The Higher Infinite. second. Springer. 2000. 3-540-00384-3.
- Book: Kechris, Alexander S. . Classical Descriptive Set Theory . registration . Springer . 1995 . 0-387-94374-9.
- Wadge, William W. . Reducibility and determinateness on the Baire space . PhD thesis . Univ. of California, Berkeley . 1983 .
Further reading
- Andretta, Alessandro . Martin, Donald . amp . Fundamenta Mathematicae. 2003. Borel-Wadge degrees. 177. 2. 175–192. 10.4064/fm177-2-5. free.
- Cenzer, Douglas. The Journal of Symbolic Logic. 1984. Monotone Reducibility and the Family of Infinite Sets. 49. 3. 774–782. 10.2307/2274130. Association for Symbolic Logic. 2274130. 37813340 .
- Duparc, Jacques. Journal of Symbolic Logic. 2001. Wadge hierarchy and Veblen hierarchy. Part I: Borel sets of finite rank. 66. 1. 55–86. 10.2307/2694911. 2694911. 17703130 .
- 10.1016/j.tcs.2006.07.053 . Selivanov, Victor L. . Theoretical Computer Science . 2006 . Towards a descriptive set theory for domain-like structures . 365 . 3 . 258–282 . 0304-3975 . free.
- 10.1007/s11786-008-0042-x. Selivanov, Victor L.. Mathematics in Computer Science. 2008. Wadge Reducibility and Infinite Computations. 2. 1. 5–36 . 38211417 . 1661-8270.
- Don Briano . The Louveau Game for the Borel Functions . Preprint . Univ. of Amsterdam, ILLC Prepublications PP-2006-24 . 2006 . 2007-08-12 .
Notes and References
- D. Martin, H. G. Dales, Truth in Mathematics, ch. "Mathematical Evidence", p.224. Oxford Science Publications, 1998.