Title: Uniqueness of Optimal Mod 3 Circuits for Parity
1Uniqueness of Optimal Mod 3 Circuits for Parity
- Frederic Green Amitabha Roy
- Clark University Akamai
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3Goal Lower bounds on parity for circuits of this
shape
d
4Reduces to Upper bounds bounds on correlation
s
s gt 1/e
d
Hajnal et al. Correlation with parity lt e here
implies
5Correlation Defn normalized of
agreements-disagreements
In this case interested in f the parity
function
and g computed by a polynomial mod m of degree d,
for odd m
6Why?
7Many reasons. Here are two
- and yet we don't know if they can simulate any
- more of ACC (e.g., parity).
8Main concern here m 3, d 2
9Reduction to Exponential Sums
The correlation can be related to an exponential
sum, Cai, Green Thierauf 1996, like those
that arise in number theory.
When m 3, this reduction is especially simple
(e.g., d2)
where,
10Generalizations
11Recent History (since ca. 2001)
Here are some things we now know
12Results Known to be Tight
Exhaustive list
13Can We Get Tighter Results?
wherever we can
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15So Let's see if we can extend this
to ALL n.
Two key ingredients in Dueñez et al.'s proof
- The optimal polynomials are unique.
- There is a "gap" in the correlation between the
- optimal polynomials and the "first suboptimal"
ones.
Conjecture (Dueñez et al.) these are true for
all n.
Question Can we even prove this when m3?
Yes!
Our answer, and main result
16Optimal Polynomials
Uniqueness Theorem These are the only ones!
Gap Theorem Anything less is "a lot" less!
17Uniqueness Theorem These are the only ones!
18Uniqueness Theorem
Proof sketch
The proof relies heavily on these identities
Note (i) and (ii) can be readily generalized to
other moduli but (iii) seems rather
mysterious.
19Uniqueness Theorem Proof, continued
- The proof is by induction on n.
- Consider the (harder) case of n odd.
- Thus our induction hypothesis is
- It is useful to think of the graph underlying t.
E.g., for - the optimal polynomials
20Uniqueness Theorem Proof, continued
Wlog, write,
and,
where t2 is a quadratic form, l and r linear
forms in the indicated variables.
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22Uniqueness Theorem Proof, continued
Wlog, write,
and,
where t2 is a quadratic form, l and r linear
forms in the indicated variables.
Then, summing over x1 and using (i), (ii), (iii),
obtain
23Uniqueness Theorem Proof, continued
24Uniqueness Theorem Proof, continued
but getting back to what we set out to prove
25Uniqueness Theorem Proof, continued
Not hard to see
Thus, by induction
t2 (l - r)2 and t2 - (l r)2 are both of
optimal form
Underlying graphs must hence have the same shape
but they could be differently labeled
or could they??
26Uniqueness Theorem Proof, concluded
Now,
Supposed to be the "difference" of two "optimal
graphs"
Such a difference consists of "loops" (or single
edges)
BUT l2r2 has too many cross terms to represent
this!
HENCE l r 0, and the polynomials are
identical.
and t is uniquely determined from t2
27Gap Theorem
Proof sketch
- Again by induction on n. Also, make use of
uniqueness.
- Start at a place we were at before
- Easy analysis if both of these are either
optimal or - suboptimal, the induction follows through.
28Gap Theorem continued
Hence assume this is optimal, this is not.
Hence, by the uniqueness theorem,
Hence,
29Gap Theorem continued
30Gap Theorem concluded
Now, this
is not so easy to evaluate.
But if we "linearize" l2 and r2 as follows, it
becomes possible
so that,
31Gap Theorem concluded
Now, this
is not so easy to evaluate.
But if we "linearize" l2 and r2 as follows, it
becomes possible
so that,
32Gap Theorem concluded
Now, this
is not so easy to evaluate.
But if we "linearize" l2 and r2 as follows, it
becomes possible
so that,
If l, r have many terms, this dominates, giving a
1/3 factor.
33Conclusions
(well, mostly questions)
- We have proved that optimal quadratic
polynomials - are unique for m3, and that there is a gap
between - suboptimal sums and the optimal ones. We know
of - no similar exact characterizations for
non-trivial circuits
- Of course, we want to do this for m other than
3. How?
- Perhaps by finding other properties than
uniqueness - and gap that will be sufficient to push
through an - inductive argument?
- Perhaps by generalizing the mysterious identity
(iii)?
- The problem of tight (or just tighter!) bounds
for - higher degrees remains a great challenge even
for - the m3 case.
34Danke schön!