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      Calibrating Randomness

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          Abstract

          We report on some recent work centered on attempts to understand when one set is more random than another. We look at various methods of calibration by initial segment complexity, such as those introduced by Solovay [125], Downey, Hirschfeldt, and Nies [39], Downey, Hirschfeldt, and LaForte [36], and Downey [31]; as well as other methods such as lowness notions of Kučera and Terwijn [71], Terwijn and Zambella [133], Nies [101, 100], and Downey, Griffiths, and Reid [34]; higher level randomness notions going back to the work of Kurtz [73], Kautz [61], and Solovay [125]; and other calibrations of randomness based on definitions along the lines of Schnorr [117].

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          The definition of random sequences

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            A Theory of Program Size Formally Identical to Information Theory

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              THE COMPLEXITY OF FINITE OBJECTS AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CONCEPTS OF INFORMATION AND RANDOMNESS BY MEANS OF THE THEORY OF ALGORITHMS

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                applab
                Bulletin of Symbolic Logic
                Bull. symb. log.
                Association for Symbolic Logic
                1079-8986
                1943-5894
                September 2006
                January 2014
                : 12
                : 03
                : 411-491
                Article
                10.2178/bsl/1154698741
                b8849b41-c1da-46f5-bc88-b8d87647010c
                © 2006
                History

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