DocumentCode :
2237085
Title :
The communication complexity of enumeration, elimination, and selection
Author :
Ambainis, Andris ; Buhrman, Harry ; Gasarch, William ; Kalyanasundaram, Bala ; Torenvliet, Leen
Author_Institution :
California Univ., Berkeley, CA, USA
fYear :
2000
fDate :
2000
Firstpage :
44
Lastpage :
53
Abstract :
Let f:{0, 1}n×{0, 1}n→{0, 1}. Assume Alice has x1, ..., xk∈{0, 1}n , Bob has y1, ..., yk∈{0, 1}n, and they want to compute f(x1, y1)···f(xk, yk) communicating as few bits as possible. The Direct Sum Conjecture of Karchmer, Raz, and Wigderson, states that the obvious way to compute it (computing f(x1, y1), then f(x2, y2), etc.) is, roughly speaking, the best. This conjecture arose in the study of circuits. Since a variant of it implies NC1 ≠NC2. We consider three related problems. Enumeration: Alice and Bob output e⩽2k-1 elements of {0, 1}k: one of which is f(x1, y1)···f(xk, yk). Elimination: Alice and Bob output an element of {0, 1}k that is not f(x1 y1)···f(xk , yk) Selection: (k=2) Alice and Bob output i~{1,2} such that if f(x1, y1)=1 V f(x2, Y2)=1 then f(xi, yi)=1. We establish lower bounds on ELIM(fk) for particular f and connect the complexity of ELIM(fk), ENUM(k, fk), and SELECT(f 2) to the direct sum conjecture and other conjectures
Keywords :
communication complexity; communication complexity; elimination; enumeration; selection; Circuits; Complexity theory; Educational institutions; Protocols;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Computational Complexity, 2000. Proceedings. 15th Annual IEEE Conference on
Conference_Location :
Florence
ISSN :
1093-0159
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-0674-7
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CCC.2000.856734
Filename :
856734
Link To Document :
بازگشت