Deciding soccer scores and partial orientations of graphs.
The depth hierarchy results for monotone circuits of Raz and McKenzie [5] are extended to the case of monotone circuits of semi-unbounded fan-in. It follows that the inclusions are proper in the monotone setting, for every .
The depth hierarchy results for monotone circuits of Raz and McKenzie [5] are extended to the case of monotone circuits of semi-unbounded fan-in. It follows that the inclusions NCi ⊆ SACi ⊆ ACi are proper in the monotone setting, for every i ≥ 1.
We study diagonalization in the context of implicit proofs of [10]. We prove that at least one of the following three conjectures is true: ∙ There is a function f: 0,1* → 0,1 computable in that has circuit complexity . ∙ ≠ co . ∙ There is no p-optimal propositional proof system. We note that a variant of the statement (either ≠ co or ∩ co contains a function hard on average) seems to have a bearing on the existence of good proof complexity generators. In particular, we prove that if a minor variant...
We introduce the notion of nested distance desert automata as a joint generalization of distance automata and desert automata. We show that limitedness of nested distance desert automata is PSPACE-complete. As an application, we show that it is decidable in space whether the language accepted by an -state non-deterministic automaton is of a star height less than a given integer (concerning rational expressions with union, concatenation and iteration), which is the first ever complexity bound...
We introduce the notion of nested distance desert automata as a joint generalization of distance automata and desert automata. We show that limitedness of nested distance desert automata is PSPACE-complete. As an application, we show that it is decidable in 22O(n) space whether the language accepted by an n-state non-deterministic automaton is of a star height less than a given integer h (concerning rational expressions with union, concatenation and iteration), which is the first ever complexity...
Beame, Cook and Hoover were the first to exhibit a log-depth, polynomial size circuit family for integer division. However, the family was not logspace-uniform. In this paper we describe log-depth, polynomial size, logspace-uniform, i.e., circuit family for integer division. In particular, by a well-known result this shows that division is in logspace. We also refine the method of the paper to show that division is in dlogtime-uniform .
Beame, Cook and Hoover were the first to exhibit a log-depth, polynomial size circuit family for integer division. However, the family was not logspace-uniform. In this paper we describe log-depth, polynomial size, logspace-uniform, i.e., NC1 circuit family for integer division. In particular, by a well-known result this shows that division is in logspace. We also refine the method of the paper to show that division is in dlogtime-uniform NC1.
In this article, we study the complexity of drunken man infinite words. We show that these infinite words, generated by a deterministic and complete countable automaton, or equivalently generated by a substitution over a countable alphabet of constant length, have complexity functions equivalent to n(log2n)2 when n goes to infinity.