In category theory, a strong monad over a monoidal category (C, ⊗, I) is a monad (T, η, μ) together with a natural transformation tA,B : ATBT(AB), called (tensorial) strength, such that the diagrams

, ,
, and

commute for every object A, B and C (see Definition 3.2 in [1]).

If the monoidal category (C, ⊗, I) is closed then a strong monad is the same thing as a C-enriched monad.

Commutative strong monads edit

For every strong monad T on a symmetric monoidal category, a costrength natural transformation can be defined by

 

A strong monad T is said to be commutative when the diagram

 

commutes for all objects   and  .[2]

One interesting fact about commutative strong monads is that they are "the same as" symmetric monoidal monads. More explicitly,

  • a commutative strong monad   defines a symmetric monoidal monad   by
     
  • and conversely a symmetric monoidal monad   defines a commutative strong monad   by
     

and the conversion between one and the other presentation is bijective.

References edit

  1. ^ Moggi, Eugenio (July 1991). "Notions of computation and monads" (PDF). Information and Computation. 93 (1): 55–92. doi:10.1016/0890-5401(91)90052-4.
  2. ^ Muscholl, Anca, ed. (2014). Foundations of software science and computation structures : 17th (Aufl. 2014 ed.). [S.l.]: Springer. pp. 426–440. ISBN 978-3-642-54829-1.