51 research outputs found
Two-Source Dispersers for Polylogarithmic Entropy and Improved Ramsey Graphs
In his 1947 paper that inaugurated the probabilistic method, Erd\H{o}s proved
the existence of -Ramsey graphs on vertices. Matching Erd\H{o}s'
result with a constructive proof is a central problem in combinatorics, that
has gained a significant attention in the literature. The state of the art
result was obtained in the celebrated paper by Barak, Rao, Shaltiel and
Wigderson [Ann. Math'12], who constructed a
-Ramsey graph, for some small universal
constant .
In this work, we significantly improve the result of Barak~\etal and
construct -Ramsey graphs, for some universal constant .
In the language of theoretical computer science, our work resolves the problem
of explicitly constructing two-source dispersers for polylogarithmic entropy
Two-Source Condensers with Low Error and Small Entropy Gap via Entropy-Resilient Functions
In their seminal work, Chattopadhyay and Zuckerman (STOC\u2716) constructed a two-source extractor with error epsilon for n-bit sources having min-entropy {polylog}(n/epsilon). Unfortunately, the construction\u27s running-time is {poly}(n/epsilon), which means that with polynomial-time constructions, only polynomially-small errors are possible. Our main result is a {poly}(n,log(1/epsilon))-time computable two-source condenser. For any k >= {polylog}(n/epsilon), our condenser transforms two independent (n,k)-sources to a distribution over m = k-O(log(1/epsilon)) bits that is epsilon-close to having min-entropy m - o(log(1/epsilon)). Hence, achieving entropy gap of o(log(1/epsilon)).
The bottleneck for obtaining low error in recent constructions of two-source extractors lies in the use of resilient functions. Informally, this is a function that receives input bits from r players with the property that the function\u27s output has small bias even if a bounded number of corrupted players feed adversarial inputs after seeing the inputs of the other players. The drawback of using resilient functions is that the error cannot be smaller than ln r/r. This, in return, forces the running time of the construction to be polynomial in 1/epsilon.
A key component in our construction is a variant of resilient functions which we call entropy-resilient functions. This variant can be seen as playing the above game for several rounds, each round outputting one bit. The goal of the corrupted players is to reduce, with as high probability as they can, the min-entropy accumulated throughout the rounds. We show that while the bias decreases only polynomially with the number of players in a one-round game, their success probability decreases exponentially in the entropy gap they are attempting to incur in a repeated game
A New Approach for Constructing Low-Error, Two-Source Extractors
Our main contribution in this paper is a new reduction from explicit two-source extractors for polynomially-small entropy rate and negligible error to explicit t-non-malleable extractors with seed-length that has a good dependence on t. Our reduction is based on the Chattopadhyay and Zuckerman framework (STOC 2016), and surprisingly we dispense with the use of resilient functions which appeared to be a major ingredient there and in follow-up works. The use of resilient functions posed a fundamental barrier towards achieving negligible error, and our new reduction circumvents this bottleneck.
The parameters we require from t-non-malleable extractors for our reduction to work hold in a non-explicit construction, but currently it is not known how to explicitly construct such extractors. As a result we do not give an unconditional construction of an explicit low-error two-source extractor. Nonetheless, we believe our work gives a viable approach for solving the important problem of low-error two-source extractors. Furthermore, our work highlights an existing barrier in constructing low-error two-source extractors, and draws attention to the dependence of the parameter t in the seed-length of the non-malleable extractor. We hope this work would lead to further developments in explicit constructions of both non-malleable and two-source extractors
Three-Source Extractors for Polylogarithmic Min-Entropy
We continue the study of constructing explicit extractors for independent
general weak random sources. The ultimate goal is to give a construction that
matches what is given by the probabilistic method --- an extractor for two
independent -bit weak random sources with min-entropy as small as . Previously, the best known result in the two-source case is an
extractor by Bourgain \cite{Bourgain05}, which works for min-entropy ;
and the best known result in the general case is an earlier work of the author
\cite{Li13b}, which gives an extractor for a constant number of independent
sources with min-entropy . However, the constant in the
construction of \cite{Li13b} depends on the hidden constant in the best known
seeded extractor, and can be large; moreover the error in that construction is
only .
In this paper, we make two important improvements over the result in
\cite{Li13b}. First, we construct an explicit extractor for \emph{three}
independent sources on bits with min-entropy .
In fact, our extractor works for one independent source with poly-logarithmic
min-entropy and another independent block source with two blocks each having
poly-logarithmic min-entropy. Thus, our result is nearly optimal, and the next
step would be to break the barrier in two-source extractors. Second, we
improve the error of the extractor from to
, which is almost optimal and crucial for cryptographic
applications. Some of the techniques developed here may be of independent
interests
Extractor Lower Bounds, Revisited
We revisit the fundamental problem of determining seed length lower bounds for strong extractors and natural variants thereof. These variants stem from a "change in quantifiers" over the seeds of the extractor: While a strong extractor requires that the average output bias (over all seeds) is small for all input sources with sufficient min-entropy, a somewhere extractor only requires that there exists a seed whose output bias is small. More generally, we study what we call probable extractors, which on input a source with sufficient min-entropy guarantee that a large enough fraction of seeds have small enough associated output bias. Such extractors have played a key role in many constructions of pseudorandom objects, though they are often defined implicitly and have not been studied extensively.
Prior known techniques fail to yield good seed length lower bounds when applied to the variants above. Our novel approach yields significantly improved lower bounds for somewhere and probable extractors. To complement this, we construct a somewhere extractor that implies our lower bound for such functions is tight in the high min-entropy regime. Surprisingly, this means that a random function is far from an optimal somewhere extractor in this regime. The techniques that we develop also yield an alternative, simpler proof of the celebrated optimal lower bound for strong extractors originally due to Radhakrishnan and Ta-Shma (SIAM J. Discrete Math., 2000)
Two Source Extractors for Asymptotically Optimal Entropy, and (Many) More
A long line of work in the past two decades or so established close
connections between several different pseudorandom objects and applications.
These connections essentially show that an asymptotically optimal construction
of one central object will lead to asymptotically optimal solutions to all the
others. However, despite considerable effort, previous works can get close but
still lack one final step to achieve truly asymptotically optimal
constructions.
In this paper we provide the last missing link, thus simultaneously achieving
explicit, asymptotically optimal constructions and solutions for various well
studied extractors and applications, that have been the subjects of long lines
of research. Our results include:
Asymptotically optimal seeded non-malleable extractors, which in turn give
two source extractors for asymptotically optimal min-entropy of ,
explicit constructions of -Ramsey graphs on vertices with , and truly optimal privacy amplification protocols with an active adversary.
Two source non-malleable extractors and affine non-malleable extractors for
some linear min-entropy with exponentially small error, which in turn give the
first explicit construction of non-malleable codes against -split state
tampering and affine tampering with constant rate and \emph{exponentially}
small error.
Explicit extractors for affine sources, sumset sources, interleaved sources,
and small space sources that achieve asymptotically optimal min-entropy of
or (for space sources).
An explicit function that requires strongly linear read once branching
programs of size , which is optimal up to the constant in
. Previously, even for standard read once branching programs, the
best known size lower bound for an explicit function is .Comment: Fixed some minor error
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