'Finite model theory' is a subfield of
model theory that focuses on properties of logical languages, such as
first-order logic, over finite structures, such as
finite groups,
graphs,
databases, and most
abstract machines. It focuses in particular on connections between logical languages and computation, and is closely associated with
discrete mathematics,
complexity theory, and
database theory.
Many important results of first-order logic and classical model theory fail when restricted to finite structures, including the
compactness theorem, the
Craig interpolation lemma, the
Los-Tarski preservation theorem, the Downward
Löwenheim-Skolem theorem, and
Gödel's completeness theorem. The essential problem is that in this context, first-order logic is not sufficiently expressive. By extending first-order logic with operators such as
transitive closure and
least fixed point, and by using fragments of second-order logic, we obtain new logics that have more interesting properties over finite structures.
One important subfield of finite model theory,
descriptive complexity, connects the expressivity of various logical languages with the capabilities of various abstract machines. For example, if a language can be expressed in first-order logic with a least fixed point operator added, a
Turing machine can determine if a given string is in the language in polynomial time (see
P). Descriptive complexity allows results to be transferred between computational complexity and mathematical logic and gives additional evidence that the standard complexity classes are "natural." Neil Immerman states "In the history of mathematical logic most interest has concentrated on infinite structures....Yet, the objects computers have and hold are always finite. To study computation we need a theory of finite structures."
[ Descriptive Complexity, , Neil, Immerman, Springer-Verlag, 1999, ISBN 0-387-98600-6 ]
Another important result of finite model theory are the zero-one laws, which establish that many types of logical formulas hold for either almost all or almost no finite structures. For example, the proportion of graphs of size ''n'' that are
connected approaches one as ''n'' approaches infinity, while the proportion that contain an
isolated vertex approaches zero. In fact the same is true of any graph property that can be checked in polynomial time: it either approaches one or approaches zero. This has ramifications for
randomized algorithms on large finite structures.
Finite model theory also studies finite restrictions of logic, such as first-order logic with only a fixed limit of ''k'' variables.
External links
★
R. Fagin.
Finite model theory-a personal perspective. Theoretical Computer Science 116, 1993, pp. 3-31.
★ Jouko Väänänen.
A Short Course on Finite Model Theory. Department of Mathematics, University of Helsinki. Based on lectures from 1993-1994.
★
Finite Model Theory Homepage at Aachen University of Technology, including a list of open problems
★
Finite Model Theory References, a database of references related to finite model theory
★
References