English

Logical locality entails frugal distributed computation over graphs

Logic in Computer Science 2009-04-14 v1 Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing

Abstract

First-order logic is known to have limited expressive power over finite structures. It enjoys in particular the locality property, which states that first-order formulae cannot have a global view of a structure. This limitation ensures on their low sequential computational complexity. We show that the locality impacts as well on their distributed computational complexity. We use first-order formulae to describe the properties of finite connected graphs, which are the topology of communication networks, on which the first-order formulae are also evaluated. We show that over bounded degree networks and planar networks, first-order properties can be frugally evaluated, that is, with only a bounded number of messages, of size logarithmic in the number of nodes, sent over each link. Moreover, we show that the result carries over for the extension of first-order logic with unary counting.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0904.1915,
  title  = {Logical locality entails frugal distributed computation over graphs},
  author = {Stephane Grumbach and Zhilin Wu},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0904.1915},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

31 pages, 0 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T12:50:43.455Z