The Homotopy Theory of ( ,1)-Categories

Hardback

Main Details

Title The Homotopy Theory of ( ,1)-Categories
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Julia E. Bergner
SeriesLondon Mathematical Society Student Texts
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:284
Dimensions(mm): Height 235,Width 156
ISBN/Barcode 9781107101364
ClassificationsDewey:514.24
Audience
Professional & Vocational
Illustrations Worked examples or Exercises

Publishing Details

Publisher Cambridge University Press
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publication Date 15 March 2018
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

The notion of an ( ,1)-category has become widely used in homotopy theory, category theory, and in a number of applications. There are many different approaches to this structure, all of them equivalent, and each with its corresponding homotopy theory. This book provides a relatively self-contained source of the definitions of the different models, the model structure (homotopy theory) of each, and the equivalences between the models. While most of the current literature focusses on how to extend category theory in this context, and centers in particular on the quasi-category model, this book offers a balanced treatment of the appropriate model structures for simplicial categories, Segal categories, complete Segal spaces, quasi-categories, and relative categories, all from a homotopy-theoretic perspective. Introductory chapters provide background in both homotopy and category theory and contain many references to the literature, thus making the book accessible to graduates and to researchers in related areas.

Author Biography

Julia E. Bergner is an Associate Professor at the University of Virginia. She has written several foundational papers in the area of ( , 1)-categories, and is currently working on generalizations to higher ( , n)-categories, ( , 1)-operads, and equivariant versions. She currently has an NSF CAREER award to investigate algebraic and geometric applications of these kinds of structures. This book was inspired by the notes from a series of lectures on 'The Homotopy Theory of Homotopy Theories' presented in Israel in 2010, with talks given by the author and a number of other participants.

Reviews

'The writing is accessible, even for students, and the ideas are clear. The author gives references for every claim and definition, with the added advantage that some technical [lengthy] points can be left out to avoid burying the ideas.' Najib Idrissi, zbMATH