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  1. On computable numberings of families of Turing degrees.Marat Faizrahmanov - forthcoming - Archive for Mathematical Logic:1-14.
    In this work, we study computable families of Turing degrees introduced and first studied by Arslanov and their numberings. We show that there exist finite families of Turing c.e. degrees both those with and without computable principal numberings and that every computable principal numbering of a family of Turing degrees is complete with respect to any element of the family. We also show that every computable family of Turing degrees has a complete with respect to each of its elements computable (...)
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  • Computable structures of rank.J. F. Knight & J. Millar - 2010 - Journal of Mathematical Logic 10 (1):31-43.
    For countable structure, "Scott rank" provides a measure of internal, model-theoretic complexity. For a computable structure, the Scott rank is at most [Formula: see text]. There are familiar examples of computable structures of various computable ranks, and there is an old example of rank [Formula: see text]. In the present paper, we show that there is a computable structure of Scott rank [Formula: see text]. We give two different constructions. The first starts with an arithmetical example due to Makkai, and (...)
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  • The tree of tuples of a structure.Matthew Harrison-Trainor & Antonio Montalbán - 2022 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 87 (1):21-46.
    Our main result is that there exist structures which cannot be computably recovered from their tree of tuples. This implies that there are structures with no computable copies which nevertheless cannot code any information in a natural/functorial way.
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  • Relative to any non-hyperarithmetic set.Noam Greenberg, Antonio Montalbán & Theodore A. Slaman - 2013 - Journal of Mathematical Logic 13 (1):1250007.
    We prove that there is a structure, indeed a linear ordering, whose degree spectrum is the set of all non-hyperarithmetic degrees. We also show that degree spectra can distinguish measure from category.
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  • Computability and uncountable linear orders II: Degree spectra.Noam Greenberg, Asher M. Kach, Steffen Lempp & Daniel D. Turetsky - 2015 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 80 (1):145-178.
  • Computability-theoretic categoricity and Scott families.Ekaterina Fokina, Valentina Harizanov & Daniel Turetsky - 2019 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 170 (6):699-717.
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  • Degrees of categoricity of computable structures.Ekaterina B. Fokina, Iskander Kalimullin & Russell Miller - 2010 - Archive for Mathematical Logic 49 (1):51-67.
    Defining the degree of categoricity of a computable structure ${\mathcal{M}}$ to be the least degree d for which ${\mathcal{M}}$ is d-computably categorical, we investigate which Turing degrees can be realized as degrees of categoricity. We show that for all n, degrees d.c.e. in and above 0 (n) can be so realized, as can the degree 0 (ω).
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  • The enumeration spectrum hierarchy of n‐families.Marat Faizrahmanov & Iskander Kalimullin - 2016 - Mathematical Logic Quarterly 62 (4-5):420-426.
    We introduce a hierarchy of sets which can be derived from the integers using countable collections. Such families can be coded into countable algebraic structures preserving their algorithmic properties. We prove that for different finite levels of the hierarchy the corresponding algebraic structures have different classes of possible degree spectra.
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  • Jump inversions of algebraic structures and Σ‐definability.Marat Faizrahmanov, Asher Kach, Iskander Kalimullin, Antonio Montalbán & Vadim Puzarenko - 2019 - Mathematical Logic Quarterly 65 (1):37-45.
    It is proved that for every countable structure and a computable successor ordinal α there is a countable structure which is ‐least among all countable structures such that is Σ‐definable in the αth jump. We also show that this result does not hold for the limit ordinal. Moreover, we prove that there is no countable structure with the degree spectrum for.
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  • A Local Version of the Slaman–Wehner Theorem and Families Closed Under Finite Differences.Marat Faizrahmanov - 2023 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 64 (2):197-203.
    The main question of this article is whether there is a family closed under finite differences (i.e., if A belongs to the family and B=∗A, then B also belongs to the family) that can be enumerated by any noncomputable c.e. degree, but which cannot be enumerated computably. This question was formulated by Greenberg et al. (2020) in their recent work in which families that are closed under finite differences, close to the Slaman–Wehner families, are deeply studied.
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  • Computability of fraïssé limits.Barbara F. Csima, Valentina S. Harizanov, Russell Miller & Antonio Montalbán - 2011 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 76 (1):66 - 93.
    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 definable by (...)
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  • Degrees of categoricity on a Cone via η-systems.Barbara F. Csima & Matthew Harrison-Trainor - 2017 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 82 (1):325-346.
    We investigate the complexity of isomorphisms of computable structures on cones in the Turing degrees. We show that, on a cone, every structure has a strong degree of categoricity, and that degree of categoricity is${\rm{\Delta }}_\alpha ^0 $-complete for someα. To prove this, we extend Montalbán’sη-system framework to deal with limit ordinals in a more general way. We also show that, for any fixed computable structure, there is an ordinalαand a cone in the Turing degrees such that the exact complexity (...)
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  • Degree spectra and immunity properties.Barbara F. Csima & Iskander S. Kalimullin - 2010 - Mathematical Logic Quarterly 56 (1):67-77.
    We analyze the degree spectra of structures in which different types of immunity conditions are encoded. In particular, we give an example of a structure whose degree spectrum coincides with the hyperimmune degrees. As a corollary, this shows the existence of an almost computable structure of which the complement of the degree spectrum is uncountable.
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  • Intrinsic bounds on complexity and definability at limit levels.John Chisholm, Ekaterina B. Fokina, Sergey S. Goncharov, Valentina S. Harizanov, Julia F. Knight & Sara Quinn - 2009 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 74 (3):1047-1060.
    We show that for every computable limit ordinal α, there is a computable structure A that is $\Delta _\alpha ^0 $ categorical, but not relatively $\Delta _\alpha ^0 $ categorical (equivalently. it does not have a formally $\Sigma _\alpha ^0 $ Scott family). We also show that for every computable limit ordinal a, there is a computable structure A with an additional relation R that is intrinsically $\Sigma _\alpha ^0 $ on A. but not relatively intrinsically $\Sigma _\alpha ^0 $ (...)
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  • Effective categoricity of Abelian p -groups.Wesley Calvert, Douglas Cenzer, Valentina S. Harizanov & Andrei Morozov - 2009 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 159 (1-2):187-197.
    We investigate effective categoricity of computable Abelian p-groups . We prove that all computably categorical Abelian p-groups are relatively computably categorical, that is, have computably enumerable Scott families of existential formulas. We investigate which computable Abelian p-groups are categorical and relatively categorical.
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  • Effective categoricity of equivalence structures.Wesley Calvert, Douglas Cenzer, Valentina Harizanov & Andrei Morozov - 2006 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 141 (1):61-78.
    We investigate effective categoricity of computable equivalence structures . We show that is computably categorical if and only if has only finitely many finite equivalence classes, or has only finitely many infinite classes, bounded character, and at most one finite k such that there are infinitely many classes of size k. We also prove that all computably categorical structures are relatively computably categorical, that is, have computably enumerable Scott families of existential formulas. Since all computable equivalence structures are relatively categorical, (...)
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  • 2007 Annual Meeting of the Association for Symbolic Logic.Mirna Džamonja - 2007 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 13 (3):386-408.
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  • Turing computable embeddings and coding families of sets.Víctor A. Ocasio-González - 2012 - In S. Barry Cooper (ed.), How the World Computes. pp. 539--548.