Communication Lower Bounds Using Dual Polynomials
Abstract
Representations of Boolean functions by real polynomials play an important role in complexity theory. Typically, one is interested in the least degree of a polynomial p(x_1,...,x_n) that approximates or sign-represents a given Boolean function f(x_1,...,x_n). This article surveys a new and growing body of work in communication complexity that centers around the dual objects, i.e., polynomials that certify the difficulty of approximating or sign-representing a given function. We provide a unified guide to the following results, complete with all the key proofs: (1) Sherstov's Degree/Discrepancy Theorem, which translates lower bounds on the threshold degree of a Boolean function into upper bounds on the discrepancy of a related function; (2) Two different methods for proving lower bounds on bounded-error communication based on the approximate degree: Sherstov's pattern matrix method and Shi and Zhu's block composition method; (3) Extension of the pattern matrix method to the multiparty model, obtained by Lee and Shraibman and by Chattopadhyay and Ada, and the resulting improved lower bounds for DISJOINTNESS; (4) David and Pitassi's separation of NP and BPP in multiparty communication complexity for k=(1-eps)log n players.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0805.2135,
title = {Communication Lower Bounds Using Dual Polynomials},
author = {Alexander A. Sherstov},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0805.2135},
year = {2008}
}
Comments
35 pages. Invited survey for The Bulletin of the European Association for Theoretical Computer Science (EATCS)