DocumentCode
925652
Title
Theoretical bounds on the complexity of inexact computations
Author
Pearl, Judea
Volume
22
Issue
5
fYear
1976
fDate
9/1/1976 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
580
Lastpage
586
Abstract
This paper considers the reduction in algorithmic complexity that can be achieved by permitting approximate answers to computational problems. It is shown that Shannon\´s rate-distortion function could, under quite general conditions, provide lower bounds on the mean complexity of inexact computations. As practical examples of this approach, we show that partial sorting of
items, insisting on matching any nonzero fraction of the terms with their correct successors, requires
comparisons. On the other hand, partial sorting in linear time is feasible (and necessary) if one permits any finite fraction of pairs to remain out of order. It is also shown that any error tolerance below 50 percent can neither reduce the state complexity of binary
-sequences from the zero-error value of
nor reduce the combinational complexity of
-variable Boolean functions from the zero-error level of
.
items, insisting on matching any nonzero fraction of the terms with their correct successors, requires
comparisons. On the other hand, partial sorting in linear time is feasible (and necessary) if one permits any finite fraction of pairs to remain out of order. It is also shown that any error tolerance below 50 percent can neither reduce the state complexity of binary
-sequences from the zero-error value of
nor reduce the combinational complexity of
-variable Boolean functions from the zero-error level of
.Keywords
Approximation methods; Computation theory; Rate-distortion theory; Sorting; Boolean functions; Computer errors; Costs; Hardware; Humans; Medical tests; Out of order; Q measurement; Rate-distortion; Sorting;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Information Theory, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9448
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TIT.1976.1055603
Filename
1055603
Link To Document