Computability and complexity theory are two central areas of research in
theoretical computer science. Until recently, most work in these areas
concentrated on problems over discrete structures, but there has been
enormous growth of computability theory and complexity theory over the
real numbers and other continuous structures, especially incorporating
concepts of "randomness." This book provides a systematic, technical
development of "algorithmic randomness" and complexity. It presents
concepts and results for understanding relative randomness and its
relation to computational complexity. These new results are important
for addressing fundamental problems in computational geometry, modeling
of dynamic systems, and classical problems in numerical computations.