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Comparator circuits are a natural circuit model for studying bounded fan-out computation whose power sits between nondeterministic branching programs and general circuits. Despite having been studied for nearly three decades, the first superlinear lower bound against comparator circuits was proved only recently by Gál and Robere (ITCS 2020), who established a Ω (n/ log n) 1.5 lower bound on the size of comparator circuits computing an explicit function of n bits.In this paper, we initiate the study of average-case complexity and circuit analysis algorithms for comparator circuits. Departing from previous approaches, we exploit the technique of shrinkage under random restrictions to obtain a variety of new results for this model. Among them, we show
Comparator circuits are a natural circuit model for studying bounded fan-out computation whose power sits between nondeterministic branching programs and general circuits. Despite having been studied for nearly three decades, the first superlinear lower bound against comparator circuits was proved only recently by Gál and Robere (ITCS 2020), who established a Ω (n/ log n) 1.5 lower bound on the size of comparator circuits computing an explicit function of n bits.In this paper, we initiate the study of average-case complexity and circuit analysis algorithms for comparator circuits. Departing from previous approaches, we exploit the technique of shrinkage under random restrictions to obtain a variety of new results for this model. Among them, we show
In this paper, we initiate the study of average-case complexity and circuit analysis algorithms for comparator circuits. Departing from previous approaches, we exploit the technique of shrinkage under random restrictions to obtain a variety of new results for this model. Among them, we show Average-case Lower Bounds For every $$k = k(n)$$ k = k ( n ) with $$k \geqslant \log n$$ k ⩾ log n , there exists a polynomial-time computable function $$f_k$$ f k on n bits such that, for every comparator circuit C with at most $$n^{1.5}/O\!\left( k\cdot \sqrt{\log n}\right) $$ n 1.5 / O k · log n gates, we have $$\begin{aligned} \mathop {{{\,\mathrm{\textbf{Pr}}\,}}}\limits _{x\in \left\{ 0,1\right\} ^n}\left[ C(x)=f_k(x)\right] \leqslant \frac{1}{2} + \frac{1}{2^{\Omega (k)}}. \end{aligned}$$ Pr x ∈ 0 , 1 n C ( x ) = f k ( x ) ⩽ 1 2 + 1 2 Ω ( k ) . This average-case lower bound matches the worst-case lower bound of Gál and Robere by letting $$k=O\!\left( \log n\right) $$ k = O log n . $$\#$$ # SAT Algorithms There is an algorithm that counts the number of satisfying assignments of a given comparator circuit with at most $$n^{1.5}/O\!\left( k\cdot \sqrt{\log n}\right) $$ n 1.5 / O k · log n gates, in time $$2^{n-k}\cdot {{\,\textrm{poly}\,}}(n)$$ 2 n - k · poly ( n ) , for any $$k\leqslant n/4$$ k ⩽ n / 4 . The running time is non-trivial (i.e., $$2^n/n^{\omega (1)}$$ 2 n / n ω ( 1 ) ) when $$k=\omega (\log n)$$ k = ω ( log n ) . Pseudorandom Generators and $$\textsf {MCSP} $$ MCSP Lower Bounds There is a pseudorandom generator of seed length $$s^{2/3+o(1)}$$ s 2 / 3 + o ( 1 ) that fools comparator circuits with s gates. Also, using this PRG, we obtain an $$n^{1.5-o(1)}$$ n 1.5 - o ( 1 ) lower bound for $$\textsf {MCSP} $$ MCSP against comparator circuits.
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