I'm trying to understand module classes that are defined as the kernels of higher Ext functors (e.g., arising here; as this paper suggests, I'm coming at this problem outside of module theory). One way to do this, of course, is to understand the higher Ext functors and then specialize to the case when they become zero. However, I'm wondering if there's a more direct route?
That is, in the $n=1$ case, $Ext^1(M, N)$ correspond to the extensions of $M$ by $N$ under a natural notion of equivalence, and the equivalence class of $0$ is represented the trivial extension, i.e., $M + N$.
Is there a similar construction for $n\geq 2$? Is there a canonical/trivial longer exact sequence that we can always build and that will represent the equivalence class of 0 in $Ext^n(M,N)$?