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    An Information-Theoretic Treatment of Random-Self-Reducibility (Extended Abstract)

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    We initiate the study of random-self-reducibility from an information-theoretic point of view. Specifically, we formally define the notion of a random-self-reduction that, with respect to a given ensemble of distributions, leaks a limited number bits, i.e., produces target instances y1, ..., yk in such a manner that each y i has limited mutual information with the input x. We argue that this notion is useful in studying the relationships between random-self-reducibility and other properties of interest, including self-correctability and NP-hardness. In the case of self-correctability, we show that the information-theoretic definition of random-self-reducibility leads to somewhat different conclusions from those drawn by Feigenbaum, Fortnow, Laplante, and Naik [13], who used the standard definition. In the case of NP-hardness, we use the information-theoretic defi..
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