The notion of a “hierarchically hyperbolic space/group” grows out of geometric similarities between CAT(0) cubical groups and mapping class groups. Hierarchical hyperbolicity is a “coarse nonpositive curvature” property that is more restrictive than acylindrical hyperbolicity but general enough to include many of the usual suspects in geometric group theory. The class of hierarchically hyperbolic groups is also closed under various procedures for constructing new groups from old, and the theory can be used, for example, to bound the asymptotic dimension and to study quasi-isometric rigidity for various groups. One disadvantage of the theory is that the definition – which is coarse-geometric and just an abstraction of properties of mapping class groups and cube complexes – is complicated. We therefore present a comparatively simple sufficient condition for a group to be hierarchically hyperbolic, in terms of an action on a hyperbolic simplicial complex. I will discuss some applications of this criterion to mapping class groups and (non-right-angled) Artin groups.
This is joint work with Jason Behrstock, Alexandre Martin, and Alessandro Sisto.
This video was produced by Newcastle University, Australia, as part of the Symmetries in Newcastle seminar series.
