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Non-homogenizable classes of finite structures. (English) Zbl 1370.03048

Regnier, Laurent (ed.) et al., 25th EACSL annual conference and 30th workshop on computer science logic, CSL’16, Marseille, France, August 29 – September 1, 2016. Proceedings. Wadern: Schloss Dagstuhl – Leibniz Zentrum für Informatik (ISBN 978-3-95977-022-4). LIPIcs – Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics 62, Article 16, 16 p. (2016).
Summary: Homogenization is a powerful way of taming a class of finite structures with several interesting applications in different areas, from Ramsey theory in combinatorics to constraint satisfaction problems (CSPs) in computer science, through (finite) model theory. A few sufficient conditions for a class of finite structures to allow homogenization are known, and here we provide a necessary condition. This lets us show that certain natural classes are not homogenizable: 1) the class of locally consistent systems of linear equations over the two-element field or any finite abelian group, and 2) the class of finite structures that forbid homomorphisms from a specific MSO-definable class of structures of treewidth two. In combination with known results, the first example shows that, up to pp-interpretability, the CSPs that are solvable by local consistency methods are distinguished from the rest by the fact that their classes of locally consistent instances are homogenizable. The second example shows that, for MSO-definable classes of forbidden patterns, treewidth one versus two is the dividing line to homogenizability.
For the entire collection see [Zbl 1351.68028].

MSC:

03C13 Model theory of finite structures