On Sets That Encode Themselves

Abstract

Given partial information about a set, we are interested in fully recovering the original set from what is given. If a set encodes itself robustly, any partial information about the set suffices to fully recover the information about the original set. Jockusch defined a set A to be introenumerable if each infinite subset of A can enumerate A, and this is an example of a set which encodes itself. There are several other notions capturing self-encoding differently. We say A is uniformly introenumerable if each infinite subset of A can uniformly enumerate A, whereas A is introreducible if each infinite subset of A can compute A. We investigate properties of various notions of self-encoding and prove new results on their interactions. Greenberg, Harrison-Trainor, Patey, and Turetsky showed that we can always find some uniformity from an introenumerable set. We show that this can be reversed: we can construct an introenumerable set by patching up uniformity. This gives a rise to a new method of constructing a nontrivial introenumerable or introreducible set.

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