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Recursive permutations whose cycles are the classes of a decidable equivalence relation are studied; the set of these permutations is called $mathrm{Perm}$, the group of all recursive permutations $mathcal{G}$. Multiple equivalent computable representations of decidable equivalence relations are provided. $mathcal{G}$-conjugacy in $mathrm{Perm}$ is characterised by computable isomorphy of cycle equivalence relations. This result parallels the equivalence of cycle type equality and conjugacy in the full symmetric group of the natural numbers. Conditions are presented for a permutation $f in mathcal{G}$ to be in $mathrm{Perm}$ and for a decidable equivalence relation to appear as the cycle relation of a member of $mathcal{G}$. In particular, two normal forms for the cycle structure of permutations are defined and it is shown that conjugacy to a permutation in the first normal form is equivalent to membership in $mathrm{Perm}$. $mathrm{Perm}$ is further characterised as the set of maximal permutations in a family of preordered subsets of automorphism groups of decidable equivalences. Conjugacy to a permutation in the second normal form corresponds to decidable cycles plus decidable cycle finiteness problem. Cycle decidability and cycle finiteness are both shown to have the maximal one-one degree of the Halting Problem. Cycle finiteness is used to prove that conjugacy in $mathrm{Perm}$ cannot be decided and that it is impossible to compute cycle deciders for products of members of $mathrm{Perm}$ and finitary permutations. It is also shown that $mathrm{Perm}$ is not recursively enumerable and that it is not a group.
Let $mathbb{F}_q$ be a finite field of odd characteristic. We study Redei functions that induce permutations over $mathbb{P}^1(mathbb{F}_q)$ whose cycle decomposition contains only cycles of length $1$ and $j$, for an integer $jgeq 2$. When $j$ is $4
A universal cycle for permutations of length $n$ is a cyclic word or permutation, any factor of which is order-isomorphic to exactly one permutation of length $n$, and containing all permutations of length $n$ as factors. It is well known that univer
The present survey aims at being a list of Conjectures and Problems in an area of model-theoretic algebra wide open for research, not a list of known results. To keep the text compact, it focuses on structures of finite Morley rank, although the same
In language learning in the limit, the most common type of hypothesis is to give an enumerator for a language. This so-called $W$-index allows for naming arbitrary computably enumerable languages, with the drawback that even the membership problem is