TY - GEN
T1 - Partition arguments in multiparty communication complexity
AU - Draisma, J.
AU - Kushilevitz, E.
AU - Weinreb, E.
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - Consider the "Number in Hand" multiparty communication complexity model, where k players P 1,...,P k holding inputs x1,…,xk ¿ 0,1n(respectively) communicate in order to compute the value f(x 1,...,x k ). The main lower bound technique for the communication complexity of such problems is that of partition arguments: partition the k players into two disjoint sets of players and find a lower bound for the induced two-party communication complexity problem. In this paper, we study the power of the partition arguments method. Our two main results are very different in nature:
(i) For randomized communication complexity we show that partition arguments may be exponentially far from the true communication complexity. Specifically, we prove that there exists a 3-argument function f whose communication complexity is O(n) but partition arguments can only yield an O(log n) lower bound. The same holds for nondeterministic communication complexity.
(ii) For deterministic communication complexity, we prove that finding significant gaps, between the true communication complexity and the best lower bound that can be obtained via partition arguments, would imply progress on (a generalized version of) the "log rank conjecture" of communication complexity.
AB - Consider the "Number in Hand" multiparty communication complexity model, where k players P 1,...,P k holding inputs x1,…,xk ¿ 0,1n(respectively) communicate in order to compute the value f(x 1,...,x k ). The main lower bound technique for the communication complexity of such problems is that of partition arguments: partition the k players into two disjoint sets of players and find a lower bound for the induced two-party communication complexity problem. In this paper, we study the power of the partition arguments method. Our two main results are very different in nature:
(i) For randomized communication complexity we show that partition arguments may be exponentially far from the true communication complexity. Specifically, we prove that there exists a 3-argument function f whose communication complexity is O(n) but partition arguments can only yield an O(log n) lower bound. The same holds for nondeterministic communication complexity.
(ii) For deterministic communication complexity, we prove that finding significant gaps, between the true communication complexity and the best lower bound that can be obtained via partition arguments, would imply progress on (a generalized version of) the "log rank conjecture" of communication complexity.
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-642-02927-1_33
DO - 10.1007/978-3-642-02927-1_33
M3 - Conference contribution
SN - 978-3-642-02926-4
T3 - Lecture Notes in Computer Science
SP - 390
EP - 402
BT - Automata, Languages and Programming (36th International Colloquium, ICALP 2009, Rhodes, Greece, July 5-12, 2009. Proceedings, Part I)
A2 - Albers, S.
A2 - Marchetti-Spaccamela, A.
A2 - Matias, Y.
A2 - Nikoletseas, S.
A2 - Thomas, W.
PB - Springer
CY - Berlin
ER -