We consider spin systems with nearest-neighbor interactions on an n-vertex
d-dimensional cube of the integer lattice graph Zd. We study the
effects that exponential decay with distance of spin correlations, specifically
the strong spatial mixing condition (SSM), has on the rate of convergence to
equilibrium distribution of non-local Markov chains. We prove that SSM implies
O(logn) mixing of a block dynamics whose steps can be implemented
efficiently. We then develop a methodology, consisting of several new
comparison inequalities concerning various block dynamics, that allow us to
extend this result to other non-local dynamics. As a first application of our
method we prove that, if SSM holds, then the relaxation time (i.e., the inverse
spectral gap) of general block dynamics is O(r), where r is the number of
blocks. A second application of our technology concerns the Swendsen-Wang
dynamics for the ferromagnetic Ising and Potts models. We show that SSM implies
an O(1) bound for the relaxation time. As a by-product of this implication we
observe that the relaxation time of the Swendsen-Wang dynamics in square boxes
of Z2 is O(1) throughout the subcritical regime of the q-state
Potts model, for all q≥2. We also prove that for monotone spin systems
SSM implies that the mixing time of systematic scan dynamics is O(logn(loglogn)2). Systematic scan dynamics are widely employed in practice but have
proved hard to analyze. Our proofs use a variety of techniques for the analysis
of Markov chains including coupling, functional analysis and linear algebra