Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4950748 | Information and Computation | 2016 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
The KuÄera-Gács theorem is a landmark result in algorithmic randomness asserting that every real is computable from a Martin-Löf random real. If the computation of the first n bits of a sequence requires n+h(n) bits of the random oracle, then h is the redundancy of the computation. KuÄera implicitly achieved redundancy nlogâ¡n while Gács used a more elaborate coding procedure which achieves redundancy nlogâ¡n. A similar bound is implicit in the later proof by Merkle and MihailoviÄ. In this paper we obtain optimal strict lower bounds on the redundancy in computations from Martin-Löf random oracles. We show that any nondecreasing computable function g such that ân2âg(n)=â is not a general upper bound on the redundancy in computations from Martin-Löf random oracles. In fact, there exists a real X such that the redundancy g of any computation of X from a Martin-Löf random oracle satisfies ân2âg(n)<â. Moreover, the class of such reals is comeager and includes a Î20 real as well as all weakly 2-generic reals. On the other hand, it has been recently shown that any real is computable from a Martin-Löf random oracle with redundancy g, provided that g is a computable nondecreasing function such that ân2âg(n)<â. Hence our lower bound is optimal, and excludes many slow growing functions such as logâ¡n from bounding the redundancy in computations from random oracles for a large class of reals. Our results are obtained as an application of a theory of effective betting strategies with restricted wagers which we develop.
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Physical Sciences and Engineering
Computer Science
Computational Theory and Mathematics
Authors
George Barmpalias, Andrew Lewis-Pye, Jason Teutsch,