4,149 research outputs found

    Arithmetic Circuit Lower Bounds via MaxRank

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    We introduce the polynomial coefficient matrix and identify maximum rank of this matrix under variable substitution as a complexity measure for multivariate polynomials. We use our techniques to prove super-polynomial lower bounds against several classes of non-multilinear arithmetic circuits. In particular, we obtain the following results : As our main result, we prove that any homogeneous depth-3 circuit for computing the product of dd matrices of dimension n×nn \times n requires Ω(nd−1/2d)\Omega(n^{d-1}/2^d) size. This improves the lower bounds by Nisan and Wigderson(1995) when d=ω(1)d=\omega(1). There is an explicit polynomial on nn variables and degree at most n2\frac{n}{2} for which any depth-3 circuit CC of product dimension at most n10\frac{n}{10} (dimension of the space of affine forms feeding into each product gate) requires size 2Ω(n)2^{\Omega(n)}. This generalizes the lower bounds against diagonal circuits proved by Saxena(2007). Diagonal circuits are of product dimension 1. We prove a nΩ(log⁥n)n^{\Omega(\log n)} lower bound on the size of product-sparse formulas. By definition, any multilinear formula is a product-sparse formula. Thus, our result extends the known super-polynomial lower bounds on the size of multilinear formulas by Raz(2006). We prove a 2Ω(n)2^{\Omega(n)} lower bound on the size of partitioned arithmetic branching programs. This result extends the known exponential lower bound on the size of ordered arithmetic branching programs given by Jansen(2008).Comment: 22 page

    Parallel Repetition of Entangled Games with Exponential Decay via the Superposed Information Cost

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    In a two-player game, two cooperating but non communicating players, Alice and Bob, receive inputs taken from a probability distribution. Each of them produces an output and they win the game if they satisfy some predicate on their inputs/outputs. The entangled value ω∗(G)\omega^*(G) of a game GG is the maximum probability that Alice and Bob can win the game if they are allowed to share an entangled state prior to receiving their inputs. The nn-fold parallel repetition GnG^n of GG consists of nn instances of GG where the players receive all the inputs at the same time and produce all the outputs at the same time. They win GnG^n if they win each instance of GG. In this paper we show that for any game GG such that ω∗(G)=1−Δ<1\omega^*(G) = 1 - \varepsilon < 1, ω∗(Gn)\omega^*(G^n) decreases exponentially in nn. First, for any game GG on the uniform distribution, we show that ω∗(Gn)=(1−Δ2)Ω(nlog⁥(∣I∣∣O∣)−∣log⁥(Δ)∣)\omega^*(G^n) = (1 - \varepsilon^2)^{\Omega\left(\frac{n}{\log(|I||O|)} - |\log(\varepsilon)|\right)}, where ∣I∣|I| and ∣O∣|O| are the sizes of the input and output sets. From this result, we show that for any entangled game GG, ω∗(Gn)≀(1−Δ2)Ω(nQlog⁥(∣I∣∣O∣)−∣log⁥(Δ)∣Q)\omega^*(G^n) \le (1 - \varepsilon^2)^{\Omega(\frac{n}{Q\log(|I||O|)} - \frac{|\log(\varepsilon)|}{Q})} where pp is the input distribution of GG and Q=∣I∣2max⁥xypxy2min⁥xypxyQ= \frac{|I|^2 \max_{xy} p_{xy}^2 }{\min_{xy} p_{xy} }. This implies parallel repetition with exponential decay as long as min⁥xy{pxy}≠0\min_{xy} \{p_{xy}\} \neq 0 for general games. To prove this parallel repetition, we introduce the concept of \emph{Superposed Information Cost} for entangled games which is inspired from the information cost used in communication complexity.Comment: In the first version of this paper we presented a different, stronger Corollary 1 but due to an error in the proof we had to modify it in the second version. This third version is a minor update. We correct some typos and re-introduce a proof accidentally commented out in the second versio

    Quantum Networks for Concentrating Entanglement

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    If two parties, Alice and Bob, share some number, n, of partially entangled pairs of qubits, then it is possible for them to concentrate these pairs into some smaller number of maximally entangled states. We present a simplified version of the algorithm for such entanglement concentration, and we describe efficient networks for implementing these operations.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figure

    Superpolynomial lower bounds for general homogeneous depth 4 arithmetic circuits

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    In this paper, we prove superpolynomial lower bounds for the class of homogeneous depth 4 arithmetic circuits. We give an explicit polynomial in VNP of degree nn in n2n^2 variables such that any homogeneous depth 4 arithmetic circuit computing it must have size nΩ(log⁥log⁥n)n^{\Omega(\log \log n)}. Our results extend the works of Nisan-Wigderson [NW95] (which showed superpolynomial lower bounds for homogeneous depth 3 circuits), Gupta-Kamath-Kayal-Saptharishi and Kayal-Saha-Saptharishi [GKKS13, KSS13] (which showed superpolynomial lower bounds for homogeneous depth 4 circuits with bounded bottom fan-in), Kumar-Saraf [KS13a] (which showed superpolynomial lower bounds for homogeneous depth 4 circuits with bounded top fan-in) and Raz-Yehudayoff and Fournier-Limaye-Malod-Srinivasan [RY08, FLMS13] (which showed superpolynomial lower bounds for multilinear depth 4 circuits). Several of these results in fact showed exponential lower bounds. The main ingredient in our proof is a new complexity measure of {\it bounded support} shifted partial derivatives. This measure allows us to prove exponential lower bounds for homogeneous depth 4 circuits where all the monomials computed at the bottom layer have {\it bounded support} (but possibly unbounded degree/fan-in), strengthening the results of Gupta et al and Kayal et al [GKKS13, KSS13]. This new lower bound combined with a careful "random restriction" procedure (that transforms general depth 4 homogeneous circuits to depth 4 circuits with bounded support) gives us our final result

    The Spatial Self: Location-Based Identity Performance on Social Media

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    This is the author's final manuscript. Copyright 2014 SAGE PublicationsAs a growing number of social media platforms now include location information from their users, researchers are confronted with new online representations of individuals, social networks, and the places they inhabit. To better understand these representations and their implications, we introduce the concept of the “spatial self”: a theoretical framework encapsulating the process of online self-presentation based on the display of offline physical activities. Building on previous studies in social science, humanities, and computer and information science, we analyze the ways offline experiences are harnessed and performed online. We first provide an encompassing interdisciplinary survey of research that investigates the relationships between location, information technology, and identity performance. Then, we identify and characterize the spatial self as well as examine its occurrences through three case studies of popular social media sites: Instagram, Facebook, and Foursquare. Finally, we offer possible research directions and methodological considerations for the analysis of geocoded social media data

    Monomial Testing and Applications

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    In this paper, we devise two algorithms for the problem of testing qq-monomials of degree kk in any multivariate polynomial represented by a circuit, regardless of the primality of qq. One is an O∗(2k)O^*(2^k) time randomized algorithm. The other is an O∗(12.8k)O^*(12.8^k) time deterministic algorithm for the same qq-monomial testing problem but requiring the polynomials to be represented by tree-like circuits. Several applications of qq-monomial testing are also given, including a deterministic O∗(12.8mk)O^*(12.8^{mk}) upper bound for the mm-set kk-packing problem.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures, submitted FAW-AAIM 2013. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1302.5898; and text overlap with arXiv:1007.2675, arXiv:1007.2678, arXiv:1007.2673 by other author

    Counting dependent and independent strings

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    The paper gives estimations for the sizes of the the following sets: (1) the set of strings that have a given dependency with a fixed string, (2) the set of strings that are pairwise \alpha independent, (3) the set of strings that are mutually \alpha independent. The relevant definitions are as follows: C(x) is the Kolmogorov complexity of the string x. A string y has \alpha -dependency with a string x if C(y) - C(y|x) \geq \alpha. A set of strings {x_1, \ldots, x_t} is pairwise \alpha-independent if for all i different from j, C(x_i) - C(x_i | x_j) \leq \alpha. A tuple of strings (x_1, \ldots, x_t) is mutually \alpha-independent if C(x_{\pi(1)} \ldots x_{\pi(t)}) \geq C(x_1) + \ldots + C(x_t) - \alpha, for every permutation \pi of [t]

    Wide bandwidth LFM transmission through a wavelength-controlled photonic true time delay device

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    We demonstrate for the first time high quality wide bandwidth (600 MHz) LFM transmission through a wavelength-controlled photonic true time delay device with bandwidth-limited resolution and peak sidelobe level below -37 dB at 5 GHz

    Simple extractors via constructions of cryptographic pseudo-random generators

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    Trevisan has shown that constructions of pseudo-random generators from hard functions (the Nisan-Wigderson approach) also produce extractors. We show that constructions of pseudo-random generators from one-way permutations (the Blum-Micali-Yao approach) can be used for building extractors as well. Using this new technique we build extractors that do not use designs and polynomial-based error-correcting codes and that are very simple and efficient. For example, one extractor produces each output bit separately in O(log⁥2n)O(\log^2 n) time. These extractors work for weak sources with min entropy λn\lambda n, for arbitrary constant λ>0\lambda > 0, have seed length O(log⁥2n)O(\log^2 n), and their output length is ≈nλ/3\approx n^{\lambda/3}.Comment: 21 pages, an extended abstract will appear in Proc. ICALP 2005; small corrections, some comments and references adde
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