Abstract
Parallelization is an algebraic operation that lifts problems to sequences in
a natural way. Given a sequence as an instance of the parallelized problem,
another sequence is a solution of this problem if every component is
instance-wise a solution of the original problem. In the Weihrauch lattice
parallelization is a closure operator. Here we introduce a dual operation that
we call stashing and that also lifts problems to sequences, but such that only
some component has to be an instance-wise solution. In this case the solution
is stashed away in the sequence. This operation, if properly defined, induces
an interior operator in the Weihrauch lattice. We also study the action of the
monoid induced by stashing and parallelization on the Weihrauch lattice, and we
prove that it leads to at most five distinct degrees, which (in the maximal
case) are always organized in pentagons. We also introduce another closely
related interior operator in the Weihrauch lattice that replaces solutions of
problems by upper Turing cones that are strong enough to compute solutions. It
turns out that on parallelizable degrees this interior operator corresponds to
stashing. This implies that, somewhat surprisingly, all problems which are
simultaneously parallelizable and stashable have computability-theoretic
characterizations. Finally, we apply all these results in order to study the
recently introduced discontinuity problem, which appears as the bottom of a
number of natural stashing-parallelization pentagons. The discontinuity problem
is not only the stashing of several variants of the lesser limited principle of
omniscience, but it also parallelizes to the non-computability problem. This
supports the slogan that "non-computability is the parallelization of
discontinuity".
Publisher
Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe (CCSD)
Subject
General Computer Science,Theoretical Computer Science
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
1. On the Complexity of Learning Programs;Lecture Notes in Computer Science;2023
2. THE DISCONTINUITY PROBLEM;The Journal of Symbolic Logic;2022-01-03