English

Specifying a positive threshold function via extremal points

Combinatorics 2017-06-07 v1 Discrete Mathematics

Abstract

An extremal point of a positive threshold Boolean function ff is either a maximal zero or a minimal one. It is known that if ff depends on all its variables, then the set of its extremal points completely specifies ff within the universe of threshold functions. However, in some cases, ff can be specified by a smaller set. The minimum number of points in such a set is the specification number of ff. It was shown in [S.-T. Hu. Threshold Logic, 1965] that the specification number of a threshold function of nn variables is at least n+1n+1. In [M. Anthony, G. Brightwell, and J. Shawe-Taylor. On specifying Boolean functions by labelled examples. Discrete Applied Mathematics, 1995] it was proved that this bound is attained for nested functions and conjectured that for all other threshold functions the specification number is strictly greater than n+1n+1. In the present paper, we resolve this conjecture negatively by exhibiting threshold Boolean functions of nn variables, which are non-nested and for which the specification number is n+1n+1. On the other hand, we show that the set of extremal points satisfies the statement of the conjecture, i.e., a positive threshold Boolean function depending on all its nn variables has n+1n+1 extremal points if and only if it is nested. To prove this, we reveal an underlying structure of the set of extremal points.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1706.01747,
  title  = {Specifying a positive threshold function via extremal points},
  author = {Vadim Lozin and Igor Razgon and Viktor Zamaraev and Elena Zamaraeva and Nikolai Yu. Zolotykh},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1706.01747},
  year   = {2017}
}