Higher-dimensional algebra
In mathematics, especially category theory, higher-dimensional algebra is the study of categorified structures. It has applications in nonabelian algebraic topology, and generalizes abstract algebra.
Higher-dimensional categories
A first step towards defining higher dimensional algebras is the concept of 2-category of category theory">Category (mathematics)">category theory, followed by the more 'geometric' concept of double category.A higher level concept is thus defined as a category of categories, or super-category, which generalises to higher dimensions the notion of category - regarded as any structure which is an interpretation of Lawvere's axioms of the elementary theory of abstract categories. Thus, a supercategory and also a super-category, can be regarded as natural extensions of the concepts of meta-category, multicategory, and multi-graph, k-partite graph, or colored graph.
Supercategories were first introduced in 1970, and were subsequently developed for applications in theoretical physics and mathematical biology or mathematical biophysics.
Other pathways in higher-dimensional algebra involve: bicategories, homomorphisms of bicategories, variable categories, topoi, effective descent, and enriched and internal categories.
Double groupoids
In higher-dimensional algebra, a double groupoid is a generalisation of a one-dimensional groupoid to two dimensions, and the latter groupoid can be considered as a special case of a category with all invertible arrows, or morphisms.Double groupoids are often used to capture information about geometrical objects such as higher-dimensional manifolds. In general, an n-dimensional manifold is a space that locally looks like an n-dimensional Euclidean space, but whose global structure may be non-Euclidean.
Double groupoids were first introduced by Ronald Brown in Double groupoids and crossed modules, and were further developed towards applications in nonabelian algebraic topology. A related, 'dual' concept is that of a double algebroid, and the more general concept of R-algebroid.