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The purpose of this chapter is to introduce the notion of a polygraphic resolution of an ω-category. This notion was introduced by Métayer to define a homology theory for ω-categories, that is now known as the polygraphic homology. It was then showed by himself and Lafont that this homology recovers the classical homology of monoids for ω-categories coming from monoids. It is now known by work of Lafont, Métayer, and Worytkiewicz that these polygraphic resolutions are resolutions in the sense of a model category structure on ω-categories, the so-called folk model structure. Every ω-category is shown to admit such a resolution, and the relationship between two resolutions of the same ω-category is examined.
Anick and Green constructed the first explicit free resolutions for algebras from a presentation of relations by non-commutative Gröbner bases, which allow computing homological invariants, such as homology groups, Hilbert and Poincaré series of algebras presented by generators and relations given by a Gröbner basis. Similar methods for calculating free resolutions for monoids and algebras, inspired by string rewriting mechanisms, have been developed in numerous works. A purely polygraphic approach to the construction of these resolutions by rewriting has been developed using the notion of (ω,1)-polygraphic resolution, where the mechanism for proving the acyclicity of the resolution relies on the construction of a normalization strategy extended in all dimensions. The construction of polygraphic resolutions by rewriting has also been applied to the case of associative algebras and shuffle operads, introducing in each case a notion of polygraph adapted to the algebraic structure. This chapter demonstrates how to construct a polygraphic resolution of a category from a convergent presentation of that category, and how to deduce an abelian version of such a resolution.
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