943 research outputs found

    Cohomology in Grothendieck Topologies and Lower Bounds in Boolean Complexity

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    This paper is motivated by questions such as P vs. NP and other questions in Boolean complexity theory. We describe an approach to attacking such questions with cohomology, and we show that using Grothendieck topologies and other ideas from the Grothendieck school gives new hope for such an attack. We focus on circuit depth complexity, and consider only finite topological spaces or Grothendieck topologies based on finite categories; as such, we do not use algebraic geometry or manifolds. Given two sheaves on a Grothendieck topology, their "cohomological complexity" is the sum of the dimensions of their Ext groups. We seek to model the depth complexity of Boolean functions by the cohomological complexity of sheaves on a Grothendieck topology. We propose that the logical AND of two Boolean functions will have its corresponding cohomological complexity bounded in terms of those of the two functions using ``virtual zero extensions.'' We propose that the logical negation of a function will have its corresponding cohomological complexity equal to that of the original function using duality theory. We explain these approaches and show that they are stable under pullbacks and base change. It is the subject of ongoing work to achieve AND and negation bounds simultaneously in a way that yields an interesting depth lower bound.Comment: 70 pages, abstract corrected and modifie

    Gender Nonconformity and the Unfulfilled Promise of Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins

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    The Supreme Court has articulated a doctrinal framework that, if construed and applied properly, provides the lower federal courts with the analytical tools necessary to identify and proscribe workplace rules that compel individuals to adhere to appearance, attire, and behavioral norms that operate to reinforce gendered expectations.1 Since the Supreme Court has ruled that penalizing an individual for failing to conform to gendered norms of behavior constitutes a form of sex-based discrimination,2 one would expect that employees would have achieved some measure of success in challenging such policies

    Sheaves and Duality in the Two-Vertex Graph Riemann-Roch Theorem

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    For each graph on two vertices, and each divisor on the graph in the sense of Baker-Norine, we describe a sheaf of vector spaces on a finite category whose zeroth Betti number is the Baker-Norine "Graph Riemann-Roch" rank of the divisor plus one. We prove duality theorems that generalize the Baker-Norine "Graph Riemann-Roch" Theorem

    The Relativized Second Eigenvalue Conjecture of Alon

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    We prove a relativization of the Alon Second Eigenvalue Conjecture for all dd-regular base graphs, BB, with dβ‰₯3d\ge 3: for any Ο΅>0\epsilon>0, we show that a random covering map of degree nn to BB has a new eigenvalue greater than 2dβˆ’1+Ο΅2\sqrt{d-1}+\epsilon in absolute value with probability O(1/n)O(1/n). Furthermore, if BB is a Ramanujan graph, we show that this probability is proportional to nβˆ’Ξ·β€‰fund(B)n^{-{\eta_{\rm \,fund}}(B)}, where η fund(B){\eta_{\rm \,fund}}(B) is an integer depending on BB, which can be computed by a finite algorithm for any fixed BB. For any dd-regular graph, BB, η fund(B){\eta_{\rm \,fund}}(B) is greater than dβˆ’1\sqrt{d-1}. Our proof introduces a number of ideas that simplify and strengthen the methods of Friedman's proof of the original conjecture of Alon. The most significant new idea is that of a ``certified trace,'' which is not only greatly simplifies our trace methods, but is the reason we can obtain the nβˆ’Ξ·β€‰fund(B)n^{-{\eta_{\rm \,fund}}(B)} estimate above. This estimate represents an improvement over Friedman's results of the original Alon conjecture for random dd-regular graphs, for certain values of dd
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