
The Mathematics of Coordinated Inference
A Study of Generalized Hat Problems
Springer (Publisher)
Published on 28. October 2013
Book
Hardback
XI, 109 pages
978-3-319-01332-9 (ISBN)
Description
Two prisoners are told that they will be brought to a room and seated so that each can see the other. Hats will be placed on their heads; each hat is either red or green. The two prisoners must simultaneously submit a guess of their own hat color, and they both go free if at least one of them guesses correctly. While no communication is allowed once the hats have been placed, they will, however, be allowed to have a strategy session before being brought to the room. Is there a strategy ensuring their release? The answer turns out to be yes, and this is the simplest non-trivial example of a "hat problem."
This book deals with the question of how successfully one can predict the value of an arbitrary function at one or more points of its domain based on some knowledge of its values at other points. Topics range from hat problems that are accessible to everyone willing to think hard, to some advanced topics in set theory and infinitary combinatorics. For example, there is a method of predicting the value f(a) of a function f mapping the reals to the reals, based only on knowledge of f's values on the open interval (a - 1, a), and for every such function the prediction is incorrect only on a countable set that is nowhere dense.
The monograph progresses from topics requiring fewer prerequisites to those requiring more, with most of the text being accessible to any graduate student in mathematics. The broad range of readership includes researchers, postdocs, and graduate students in the fields of set theory, mathematical logic, and combinatorics. The hope is that this book will bring together mathematicians from different areas to think about set theory via a very broad array of coordinated inference problems.
This book deals with the question of how successfully one can predict the value of an arbitrary function at one or more points of its domain based on some knowledge of its values at other points. Topics range from hat problems that are accessible to everyone willing to think hard, to some advanced topics in set theory and infinitary combinatorics. For example, there is a method of predicting the value f(a) of a function f mapping the reals to the reals, based only on knowledge of f's values on the open interval (a - 1, a), and for every such function the prediction is incorrect only on a countable set that is nowhere dense.
The monograph progresses from topics requiring fewer prerequisites to those requiring more, with most of the text being accessible to any graduate student in mathematics. The broad range of readership includes researchers, postdocs, and graduate students in the fields of set theory, mathematical logic, and combinatorics. The hope is that this book will bring together mathematicians from different areas to think about set theory via a very broad array of coordinated inference problems.
Reviews / Votes
From the book reviews: "The book presents, in a unified way, attractive topics in graph theory, topology, and set theory that all relate to the dilemma faced by Alice and Bob and others in hat problems. The first few chapters are of great general interest as they summarize hat problems that any mathematician can understand. The later chapters will be of interest to those well versed in set theory or certain aspects of point-set topology." (Stan Wagon, Mathematical Reviews, October, 2014)More details
Product info
HC runder Rücken kaschiert
Series
Band 33
Language
English
Place of publication
Cham
Switzerland
Target group
Research
Product notice
Laminated cover
Illustrations
biography
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 155 mm
Thickness: 13 mm
Weight
356 gr
ISBN-13
978-3-319-01332-9 (9783319013329)
DOI
10.1007/978-3-319-01333-6
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Christopher S. Hardin | Alan D. Taylor
The Mathematics of Coordinated Inference
A Study of Generalized Hat Problems
Book
08/2016
Springer
€53.49
Shipment within 10-15 days

Christopher S. Hardin | Alan D. Taylor
The Mathematics of Coordinated Inference
A Study of Generalized Hat Problems
E-Book
10/2013
Springer
€53.49
Available for download
Content
1. Introduction.- 2. The Finite Setting.- 3. The Denumerable Setting: Full Visibility.- 4. The Denumerable Setting: One-Way Visibility.- 5. Dual Hat Problems and the Uncountable.- 6. Galvin's Setting: Neutral and Anonymous Predictors.- 7. The Topological Setting.- 8. Universality of the µ-Predictor.- 9. Generalizations and Galois-Tukey Connections.- Bibliography.- Index.