Rel, bicategory of relations, allegory
left and right euclidean;
extensional, well-founded relations.
The notion of a structured cospan is a modification of the concept of decorated cospans, introduced to provide an improved definition of isomorphism classes of decorated cospans.
To better understand this motivation, notice that the decoration of the target of an isomorphism of decorated cospans is completely determined by the decoration of the source and the chosen isomorphism of vertices.
More clearly, let
be an isomorphism of decorated cospans, where and are the decorations of the source and the target, respectively (i.e., the ‘top’ and the ‘bottom’ cospan in the left diagram, respectively). Then, since the right diagram sits in , it commutes on the nose. Thus the decoration is already determined by the data of bijection , together with the decoration on the source.
Therefore, this definition of isomorphism means we are lacking a degree of freedom, namely the freedom to specify an isomorphism for the decorations as well. For example, when open graphs are treated with decorated cospans, the decoration of a cospan is a directed graph with as vertex set. An isomorphism of such decorated cospans simply renames the source and target of each edge in . However, isomorphism of directed graphs can be more than just relabeling of the vertices; hence we end up distinguishing open graphs merely by frivolous details like the specific names we give to edges.
Decorated cospans solve this problem by moving the cospans to the ‘decorating category’, meaning that the data of an isomorphism of cospans now is an arrow between the decorations. In the example of open graphs, we now have to specify an isomorphism of quivers instead of getting this from the (poorer) isomorphism of their vertices.
Let be a category admitting finite coproducts, a category admitting finite colimits and a functor preserving finite coproducts. Then the symmetric monoidal double category of structured cospans over is the category which has
which are composed through the obvious pushout,
which are composed horizontally in the obvious way.
(Assuming the existence and preservations of coproducts are unnecessary simply to get a double category, without monoidal structure.)
A structured cospan is then a (-)morphism in such a category, that is, a cospan in with the additional data of the functor and the two preimages of the feet.
Structured cospan categories were invented by John C. Baez, Kenny Courser, and Christina Vasilakopoulou. An introductory talk was given by Courser at the 4th Symposium on Compositional Structures:
John C. Baez, Kenny Courser, Structured cospans, Theory and Applications of Categories 35 48 (2020) 1771-1822 arXiv:1911.04630, tac:35-48
John C. Baez, Kenny Courser, Structured cospans talk notes (2019) (pdf)
Last revised on December 2, 2023 at 12:59:38. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.