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Kiyoshi Igusa

Other affiliations: Syracuse University
Bio: Kiyoshi Igusa is an academic researcher from Brandeis University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Quiver & Cohomology. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 123 publications receiving 1897 citations. Previous affiliations of Kiyoshi Igusa include Syracuse University.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 1988-K-theory
TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a Pseudoisotopy-based stability model for Morse theory, which is supported by NSF Grant No. MCS-85-02317.
Abstract: Key w o r d s , Pseudoisotopy, stability, Morse theory. iSupported by NSF Grant No. MCS-85-02317.

122 citations

01 Jan 2002
TL;DR: In this article, a simple condition which implies finiteness of the finitistic global dimension conjecture for artin algebras is given, which is a generalization of the radical cubed zero case since all syzygies have radical square zero in that case.
Abstract: We find a simple condition which implies finiteness of finitistic global dimension for artin algebras. As a consequence we obtain a short proof of the finitistic global dimension conjecture for radical cubed zero algebras. The same condition also holds for algebras of representation dimension less then or equal to three. Hence the finitistic dimension conjecture holds in that case as well. Let Λ be an Artin algebra (an algebra of finite length over a commutative Artinian ring). Then the finitistic global dimension conjecture states that there exists a uniform bound called findimΛ for the finite projective dimensions (pd) of all f.g. (left) Λ-modules of finite pd. This conjecture would imply the Nakayama conjecture. Some of the known cases in which the finitistic global dimension conjecture holds are the radical cubed zero case [GZ] and the monomial relation case [GKK] (see also [IZ], [BFGZ]). The conjecture is also true in the case when the category of modules of finite pd is contravariantly finite in the category of all f.g. modules [AR]. However, the converse is not true [IST]. In this paper we give a short proof of the finitistic gl dim conjecture for all modules of radical square zero over any Artin algebra. This is a generalization of the radical cubed zero case since all syzygies have radical square zero in that case. A thorough overview of the state of the finitistic global dimension conjecture can be found in [Z-H]. As another consequence of the main theorem we prove the finitistic dimension conjecture for algebras with weak representation dimension at most 3, and consequently for algebras with representation dimension repdimΛ ≤ 3. The notion of representation dimension was introduced by M. Auslander in his Queen Mary Notes [A1], and he and many others expect this dimension to be bounded by 3. O. Iyama showed that it is always finite [I], many classes of algebras are known to have repdimΛ = 3, the most recent class being subalgebras of algebras of finite representation type with the same radical [EHIS]. The proof of the main theorem is based on the following well-known elementary observation. Lemma 1 (Fitting’s Lemma). a) Let M be a module over a Noetherian ring R and let f : M → M be an endomorphism of M . Then for any Research supported by NSF 90 02512 Research supported by NSF 90 09590

118 citations

Book
01 Jan 2002
TL;DR: The framing principle and Bokstedt's theorem as mentioned in this paper have been studied in the context of the Whitehead space and a model for the whitehead spaces of matrices and higher Franz-Reidemeister torsion.
Abstract: Cocycles in Volodin $K$-theory Spaces of matrices and higher Franz-Reidemeister torsion A model for the Whitehead spaces Morse theory and filtered chain complexes Homotopy type of the Whitehead space The framing principle and Bokstedt's theorem Proof of complexified Bokstedt theorem Framed graphs Bibliography Index.

103 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used algebraic K-theory to resolve the no loops conjecture for finite dimensional algebras of finite global dimension over an algebraically closed field.

86 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors give necessary and sufficient conditions for a finite k-modulated translation quiver to be an Auslander-Reiten quiver in terms of certain homology groups associated to the quiver.

86 citations


Cited by
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Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 1989

1,062 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors introduce the notion of Leibniz algebras, which are modules over a commutative ring k, equipped with a bilinear map.
Abstract: The homology of Lie algebras is closely related to the cyclic homology of associative algebras [LQ]. In [L] the first author constructed a \"noncommutative\" analog of Lie algebra homology which is, similarly, related to Hochschild homology [C, L]. For a Lie algebra g this new theory is the homology of the complex C,(g) ... ~ ~| g|-+ ... ~1 ~ k, whose boundary map d is given by the formula d(gl|174 = ~ (-1)J(gl@'\"|174174174 \" l

653 citations

Book
01 Jan 1961

627 citations