Structure and randomness in combinatorics
Combinatorics
2011-11-10 v2
Abstract
Combinatorics, like computer science, often has to deal with large objects of unspecified (or unusable) structure. One powerful way to deal with such an arbitrary object is to decompose it into more usable components. In particular, it has proven profitable to decompose such objects into a \emph{structured} component, a \emph{pseudo-random} component, and a \emph{small} component (i.e. an error term); in many cases it is the structured component which then dominates. We illustrate this philosophy in a number of model cases.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.0707.4269,
title = {Structure and randomness in combinatorics},
author = {Terence Tao},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0707.4269},
year = {2011}
}
Comments
13 pages, no figures. FOCS 2007 tutorial notes. Minor corrections