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New Computational Paradigms: Changing Conceptions of What is Computable

TLDR
New developments in the theory and practice of computation from a mathematical perspective are examined, with topics ranging from classical computability to complexity, from biocomputing to quantum computing.
Abstract
In recent years, classical computability has expanded beyond its original scope to address issues related to computability and complexity in algebra, analysis, and physics. The deep interconnection between "computation" and "proof" has originated much of the most significant work in constructive mathematics and mathematical logic of the last 70 years. Moreover, the increasingly compelling necessity to deal with computability in the real world (such as computing on continuous data, biological computing, and physical models) has brought focus to new paradigms of computation that are based on biological and physical models. These models address questions of efficiency in a radically new way and even threaten to move the so-called Turing barrier, i.e. the line between the decidable and the un-decidable. This book examines new developments in the theory and practice of computation from a mathematical perspective, with topics ranging from classical computability to complexity, from biocomputing to quantum computing. The book opens with an introduction by Andrew Hodges, the Turing biographer, who analyzes the pioneering work that anticipated recent developments concerning computations allegedly new paradigms. The remaining material covers traditional topics in computability theory such as relative computability, theory of numberings, and domain theory, in addition to topics on the relationships between proof theory, computability, and complexity theory. New paradigms of computation arising from biology and quantum physics are also discussed, as well as the computability of the real numbers and its related issues. This book is suitable for researchers and graduate students in mathematics, philosophy, and computer science with a special interest in logic and foundational issues. Most useful to graduate students are the survey papers on computable analysis and biological computing. Logicians and theoretical physicists will also benefit from this book.

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Neurons withgraded response havecollective computational properties likethoseoftwo-state neurons

TL;DR: This paper shows that the important properties of the earlier stochastic model based on McCulloch-Pitts neurons remain intact and are one of thesimplest collective properties of such a system.
Journal ArticleDOI

Norm convergence of multiple ergodic averages for commuting transformations

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the multiple ergodic averages are convergent in as for all for commuting transformations on a probability space, assuming additional ergodicity hypotheses on the maps Ti and TiTj−1 by Frantzikinakis and Kra.
Posted Content

Norm convergence of multiple ergodic averages for commuting transformations

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the multiple ergodic averages of commuting measure-preserving transformations on a probability space are convergent in the case of all possible ergodicity hypotheses on the maps.
Journal ArticleDOI

A natural axiomatization of computability and proof of church's thesis

TL;DR: It is shown that augmenting those postulates about algorithmic computation with an additional requirement regarding basic operations gives a natural axiomatization of computability and a proof of Church's Thesis, as Gödel and others suggested may be possible.
Journal ArticleDOI

Turing Oracle Machines, Online Computing, and Three Displacements in Computability Theory

TL;DR: It is argued that Turing o-mACHines, relative computability, and online computing are the most important concepts in the subject, more so than Turing a-machines and standard computable functions since they are special cases of the former.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

On Computable Numbers, with an Application to the Entscheidungsproblem

TL;DR: This chapter discusses the application of the diagonal process of the universal computing machine, which automates the calculation of circle and circle-free numbers.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Algorithms for quantum computation: discrete logarithms and factoring

TL;DR: Las Vegas algorithms for finding discrete logarithms and factoring integers on a quantum computer that take a number of steps which is polynomial in the input size, e.g., the number of digits of the integer to be factored are given.
Book

Membrane Computing: An Introduction

Gheorghe Paun
TL;DR: This chapter discusses Membrane Computing, What It Is and What It is Not, and attempts to get back to reality with open problems and Universality results.
Journal ArticleDOI

Networks of spiking neurons: the third generation of neural network models

TL;DR: It is shown that networks of spiking neurons are, with regard to the number of neurons that are needed, computationally more powerful than other neural network models based on McCulloch Pitts neurons and sigmoidal gates.
Book

Differential Equations, Dynamical Systems, and an Introduction to Chaos

TL;DR: Hirsch, Devaney, and Smale's classic "Differential Equations, Dynamical Systems, and an Introduction to Chaos" has been used by professors as the primary text for undergraduate and graduate level courses covering differential equations as mentioned in this paper.