Search results for "complexi"

showing 10 items of 1116 documents

Lower space bounds for randomized computation

1994

It is a fundamental problem in the randomized computation how to separate different randomized time or randomized space classes (c.f., e.g., [KV87, KV88]). We have separated randomized space classes below log n in [FK94]. Now we have succeeded to separate small randomized time classes for multi-tape 2-way Turing machines. Surprisingly, these “small” bounds are of type n+f(n) with f(n) not exceeding linear functions. This new approach to “sublinear” time complexity is a natural counterpart to sublinear space complexity. The latter was introduced by considering the input tape and the work tape as separate devices and distinguishing between the space used for processing information and the spa…

Discrete mathematicsCombinatoricsTuring machinesymbols.namesakeSublinear functionKolmogorov complexitysymbolsType (model theory)Binary logarithmSpace (mathematics)Time complexityWord (computer architecture)Mathematics
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Padding and the expressive power of existential second-order logics

1998

Padding techniques are well-known from Computational Complexity Theory. Here, an analogous concept is considered in the context of existential second-order logics. Informally, a graph H is a padded version of a graph G, if H consists of an isomorphic copy of G and some isolated vertices. A set A of graphs is called weakly expressible by a formula ϕ in the presence of padding, if ϕ is able to distinguish between (sufficiently) padded versions of graphs from A and padded versions of graphs that are not in A.

Discrete mathematicsComputational complexity theoryComputer sciencePaddingExpressive powerExistentialismGraphVertex (geometry)CombinatoricsLogical programmingComplexity classIsomorphismUnary functionMathematicsofComputing_DISCRETEMATHEMATICS
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Reordering Method and Hierarchies for Quantum and Classical Ordered Binary Decision Diagrams

2017

We consider Quantum OBDD model. It is restricted version of read-once Quantum Branching Programs, with respect to “width” complexity. It is known that maximal complexity gap between deterministic and quantum model is exponential. But there are few examples of such functions. We present method (called “reordering”), which allows to build Boolean function g from Boolean Function f, such that if for f we have gap between quantum and deterministic OBDD complexity for natural order of variables, then we have almost the same gap for function g, but for any order. Using it we construct the total function REQ which deterministic OBDD complexity is \(2^{\varOmega (n/log n)}\) and present quantum OBD…

Discrete mathematicsComputational complexity theoryImplicit functionBinary decision diagram010102 general mathematics0102 computer and information sciencesFunction (mathematics)Computer Science::Artificial IntelligenceComputer Science::Computational Complexity01 natural sciencesCombinatorics010201 computation theory & mathematicsComputer Science::Logic in Computer ScienceComplexity class0101 mathematicsBoolean functionQuantum complexity theoryQuantum computerMathematics
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If P ≠ NP then Some Strongly Noninvertible Functions Are Invertible

2001

Rabi, Rivest, and Sherman alter the standard notion of noninvertibility to a new notion they call strong noninvertibility, and show--via explicit cryptographic protocols for secret-key agreement ([RS93, RS97] attribute this to Rivest and Sherman) and digital signatures [RS93, RS97]--that strongly noninvertible functions would be very useful components in protocol design. Their definition of strong noninvertibility has a small twist ("respecting the argument given") that is needed to ensure cryptographic usefulness. In this paper, we show that this small twist has a large, unexpected consequence: Unless P = NP, some strongly noninvertible functions are invertible.

Discrete mathematicsComputational complexity theorybusiness.industryP versus NP problemCryptographyCryptographic protocollaw.inventionInvertible matrixDigital signaturelawTwistbusinessTime complexityMathematics
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NP-completeness of the hamming salesman problem

1985

It is shown that the traveling salesman problem, where cities are bit strings with Hamming distances, is NP-complete.

Discrete mathematicsComputer Networks and CommunicationsApplied MathematicsComputer Science::Neural and Evolutionary ComputationHamming distanceComputer Science::Computational ComplexityTravelling salesman problemCombinatoricsHigh Energy Physics::TheoryComputational MathematicsCompleteness (order theory)Computer Science::Data Structures and AlgorithmsNP-completeBottleneck traveling salesman problemHamming codeSoftwareComputer Science::Information TheoryMathematicsBIT
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Graph connectivity and monadic NP

2002

Ehrenfeucht games are a useful tool in proving that certain properties of finite structures are not expressible by formulas of a certain type. In this paper a new method is introduced that allows the extension of a local winning strategy for Duplicator, one of the two players in Ehrenfeucht games, to a global winning strategy. As an application it is shown that graph connectivity cannot be expressed by existential second-order formulas, where the second-order quantification is restricted to unary relations (monadic NP), even, in the presence of a built-in linear order. As a second application it is stated, that, on the other hand, the presence of a linear order increases the power of monadi…

Discrete mathematicsComputer Science::Computer Science and Game TheoryUnary operationComputational complexity theoryRelation (database)Extension (predicate logic)Type (model theory)CombinatoricsTheoryofComputation_MATHEMATICALLOGICANDFORMALLANGUAGESComputer Science::Logic in Computer ScienceOrder (group theory)Game theoryComputer Science::Formal Languages and Automata TheoryConnectivityMathematicsProceedings 35th Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science
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First-order expressibility of languages with neutral letters or: The Crane Beach conjecture

2005

A language L over an alphabet A is said to have a neutral letter if there is a letter [email protected]?A such that inserting or deleting e's from any word in A^* does not change its membership or non-membership in L. The presence of a neutral letter affects the definability of a language in first-order logic. It was conjectured that it renders all numerical predicates apart from the order predicate useless, i.e., that if a language L with a neutral letter is not definable in first-order logic with linear order, then it is not definable in first-order logic with any set N of numerical predicates. Named after the location of its first, flawed, proof this conjecture is called the Crane Beach …

Discrete mathematicsConjectureComputer Networks and CommunicationsApplied MathematicsFirst orderNumerical predicatesPredicate (grammar)Theoretical Computer ScienceFirst-order logicIterated logarithmCombinatoricsComputational Theory and MathematicsRegular languageDatabase theoryCircuit complexityFirst-order logicCircuit uniformityMathematicsJournal of Computer and System Sciences
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On a Conjecture on Bidimensional Words

2003

We prove that, given a double sequence w over the alphabet A (i.e. a mapping from Z2 to A), if there exists a pair (n0, m0) ∈ Z2 such that pw(n0, m0) < 1/100n0m0, then w has a periodicity vector, where pw is the complexity function in rectangles of w.

Discrete mathematicsConjectureGeneral Computer ScienceExistential quantificationTheoretical Computer ScienceCombinatoricsCombinatorics on wordsFormal languageComplexity functionPattern matchingAlphabetDouble sequenceComputer Science(all)Mathematics
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Approximate convex hull of affine iterated function system attractors

2012

International audience; In this paper, we present an algorithm to construct an approximate convex hull of the attractors of an affine iterated function system (IFS). We construct a sequence of convex hull approximations for any required precision using the self-similarity property of the attractor in order to optimize calculations. Due to the affine properties of IFS transformations, the number of points considered in the construction is reduced. The time complexity of our algorithm is a linear function of the number of iterations and the number of points in the output convex hull. The number of iterations and the execution time increases logarithmically with increasing accuracy. In additio…

Discrete mathematicsConvex hull0209 industrial biotechnologyGeneral MathematicsApplied Mathematics010102 general mathematicsProper convex functionConvex setMathematicsofComputing_GENERALGeneral Physics and AstronomyStatistical and Nonlinear Physics02 engineering and technology[ INFO.INFO-GR ] Computer Science [cs]/Graphics [cs.GR]01 natural sciences[INFO.INFO-GR]Computer Science [cs]/Graphics [cs.GR]020901 industrial engineering & automationAffine hullTheoryofComputation_ANALYSISOFALGORITHMSANDPROBLEMCOMPLEXITYConvex polytopeOutput-sensitive algorithmConvex combination0101 mathematicsConvex conjugateMathematics
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Dichotomies properties on computational complexity of S-packing coloring problems

2015

This work establishes the complexity class of several instances of the S -packing coloring problem: for a graph G , a positive integer k and a nondecreasing list of integers S = ( s 1 , ? , s k ) , G is S -colorable if its vertices can be partitioned into sets S i , i = 1 , ? , k , where each S i is an s i -packing (a set of vertices at pairwise distance greater than s i ). In particular we prove a dichotomy between NP-complete problems and polynomial-time solvable problems for lists of at most four integers.

Discrete mathematicsDichotomyComputational complexity theory010102 general mathematics0102 computer and information sciences01 natural sciencesGraphTheoretical Computer ScienceCombinatoricsIntegerSet packing010201 computation theory & mathematicsComplexity classDiscrete Mathematics and CombinatoricsPairwise comparison0101 mathematicsColoring problemMathematicsDiscrete Mathematics
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