Unbounded-Error Classical and Quantum Communication Complexity
Abstract
Since the seminal work of Paturi and Simon \cite[FOCS'84 & JCSS'86]{PS86}, the unbounded-error classical communication complexity of a Boolean function has been studied based on the arrangement of points and hyperplanes. Recently, \cite[ICALP'07]{INRY07} found that the unbounded-error {\em quantum} communication complexity in the {\em one-way communication} model can also be investigated using the arrangement, and showed that it is exactly (without a difference of even one qubit) half of the classical one-way communication complexity. In this paper, we extend the arrangement argument to the {\em two-way} and {\em simultaneous message passing} (SMP) models. As a result, we show similarly tight bounds of the unbounded-error two-way/one-way/SMP quantum/classical communication complexities for {\em any} partial/total Boolean function, implying that all of them are equivalent up to a multiplicative constant of four. Moreover, the arrangement argument is also used to show that the gap between {\em weakly} unbounded-error quantum and classical communication complexities is at most a factor of three.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0709.2761,
title = {Unbounded-Error Classical and Quantum Communication Complexity},
author = {Kazuo Iwama and Harumichi Nishimura and Rudy Raymond and Shigeru Yamashita},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0709.2761},
year = {2016}
}
Comments
11 pages. To appear at Proc. ISAAC 2007