24 research outputs found

    10061 Abstracts Collection -- Circuits, Logic, and Games

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    From 07/02/10 to 12/02/10, the Dagstuhl Seminar 10061 ``Circuits, Logic, and Games \u27\u27 was held in Schloss Dagstuhl~--~Leibniz Center for Informatics. During the seminar, several participants presented their current research, and ongoing work and open problems were discussed. Abstracts of the presentations given during the seminar as well as abstracts of seminar results and ideas are put together in this paper. The first section describes the seminar topics and goals in general. Links to extended abstracts or full papers are provided, if available

    On dlogtime and polylogtime reductions

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    We investigate properties of the relativized NC and AC hierarchies in their DLOGTIME-. respectively, ALOGTIME-uniform setting and show that these hierarchies can be characterized in terms of adaptive reducibility in logarithmic or polylogarithmic time, i.e. O (log_n)〗⁡2 for i ≥ 0. As a corollary, the relationship between AC^i and NC^i+1 reducibility is clarified by the result stating that if DLOGTIME-uniform AC' and ALOGTIME-u11iform NC•+1 reducibility coincide for i = o when applied to an arbitrary function class F, then they coincide on F for all i 2 O. Our result.substantially generalize various previous results (Wi 90), (ABJ 91), (Ba 91)

    A parameterized halting problem, the linear time hierarchy, and the MRDP theorem

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    The complexity of the parameterized halting problem for nondeterministic Turing machines p-Halt is known to be related to the question of whether there are logics capturing various complexity classes [10]. Among others, if p-Halt is in para-AC0, the parameterized version of the circuit complexity class AC0, then AC0, or equivalently, (+, x)-invariant FO, has a logic. Although it is widely believed that p-Halt ∉. para-AC0, we show that the problem is hard to settle by establishing a connection to the question in classical complexity of whether NE ⊈ LINH. Here, LINH denotes the linear time hierarchy. On the other hand, we suggest an approach toward proving NE ⊈ LINH using bounded arithmetic. More specifically, we demonstrate that if the much celebrated MRDP (for Matiyasevich-Robinson-Davis-Putnam) theorem can be proved in a certain fragment of arithmetic, then NE ⊈ LINH. Interestingly, central to this result is a para-AC0 lower bound for the parameterized model-checking problem for FO on arithmetical structures.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Sublinear-Time Language Recognition and Decision by One-Dimensional Cellular Automata

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    After an apparent hiatus of roughly 30 years, we revisit a seemingly neglected subject in the theory of (one-dimensional) cellular automata: sublinear-time computation. The model considered is that of ACAs, which are language acceptors whose acceptance condition depends on the states of all cells in the automaton. We prove a time hierarchy theorem for sublinear-time ACA classes, analyze their intersection with the regular languages, and, finally, establish strict inclusions in the parallel computation classes SC\mathsf{SC} and (uniform) AC\mathsf{AC}. As an addendum, we introduce and investigate the concept of a decider ACA (DACA) as a candidate for a decider counterpart to (acceptor) ACAs. We show the class of languages decidable in constant time by DACAs equals the locally testable languages, and we also determine Ω(n)\Omega(\sqrt{n}) as the (tight) time complexity threshold for DACAs up to which no advantage compared to constant time is possible.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figures, to appear at DLT 202

    Slicewise Definability in First-Order Logic with Bounded Quantifier Rank

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    For every natural number q let FO_q denote the class of sentences of first-order logic FO of quantifier rank at most q. If a graph property can be defined in FO_q, then it can be decided in time O(n^q). Thus, minimizing q has favorable algorithmic consequences. Many graph properties amount to the existence of a certain set of vertices of size k. Usually this can only be expressed by a sentence of quantifier rank at least k. We use the color coding method to demonstrate that some (hyper)graph problems can be defined in FO_q where q is independent of k. This property of a graph problem is equivalent to the question of whether the corresponding parameterized problem is in the class para-AC^0. It is crucial for our results that the FO-sentences have access to built-in addition and multiplication (and constants for an initial segment of natural numbers whose length depends only on k). It is known that then FO corresponds to the circuit complexity class uniform AC^0. We explore the connection between the quantifier rank of FO-sentences and the depth of AC^0-circuits, and prove that FO_q is strictly contained in FO_{q+1} for structures with built-in addition and multiplication
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