Sensitivity theorem

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In computational complexity, the sensitivity theorem, proved by Hao Huang in 2019,[1] states that the sensitivity of a Boolean function is at least the square root of its degree, thus settling a conjecture posed by Nisan and Szegedy in 1992.[2] The proof is notably succinct, given that prior progress had been limited.[3]

Background

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Several papers in the late 1980s and early 1990s[4][5][6][7] showed that various decision tree complexity measures of Boolean functions are polynomially related, meaning that if   are two such measures then   for some constant  . Nisan and Szegedy[2] showed that degree and approximate degree are also polynomially related to all these measures. Their proof went via yet another complexity measure, block sensitivity, which had been introduced by Nisan.[7] Block sensitivity generalizes a more natural measure, (critical) sensitivity, which had appeared before.[8][9][10]

Nisan and Szegedy asked[11] whether block sensitivity is polynomially bounded by sensitivity (the other direction is immediate since sensitivity is at most block sensitivity). This is equivalent to asking whether sensitivity is polynomially related to the various decision tree complexity measures, as well as to degree, approximate degree, and other complexity measures which have been shown to be polynomially related to these along the years.[12] This became known as the sensitivity conjecture.[13]

Along the years, several special cases of the sensitivity conjecture were proven.[14][15] The sensitivity theorem was finally proven in its entirety by Huang,[1] using a reduction of Gotsman and Linial.[16]

Statement

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Every Boolean function   can be expressed in a unique way as a multilinear polynomial. The degree of   is the degree of this unique polynomial, denoted  .

The sensitivity of the Boolean function   at the point   is the number of indices   such that  , where   is obtained from   by flipping the  'th coordinate. The sensitivity of   is the maximum sensitivity of   at any point  , denoted  .

The sensitivity theorem states that

 

In the other direction, Tal,[17] improving on an earlier bound of Nisan and Szegedy,[2] showed that

 

The sensitivity theorem is tight for the AND-of-ORs function:[18]

 

This function has degree   and sensitivity  .

Proof

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Let   be a Boolean function of degree  . Consider any maxonomial of  , that is, a monomial of degree   in the unique multilinear polynomial representing  . If we substitute an arbitrary value in the coordinates not mentioned in the monomial then we get a function   on   coordinates which has degree  , and moreover,  . If we prove the sensitivity theorem for   then it follows for  . So from now on, we assume without loss of generality that   has degree  .

Define a new function   by

 

It can be shown that since   has degree   then   is unbalanced (meaning that  ), say  . Consider the subgraph   of the hypercube (the graph on   in which two vertices are connected if they differ by a single coordinate) induced by  . In order to prove the sensitivity theorem, it suffices to show that   has a vertex whose degree is at least  . This reduction is due to Gotsman and Linial.[16]

Huang[1] constructs a signing of the hypercube in which the product of the signs along any square is  . This means that there is a way to assign a sign to every edge of the hypercube so that this property is satisfied. The same signing had been found earlier by Ahmadi et al.,[19] which were interested in signings of graphs with few distinct eigenvalues.

Let   be the signed adjacency matrix corresponding to the signing. The property that the product of the signs in every square is   implies that  , and so half of the eigenvalues of   are   and half are  . In particular, the eigenspace of   (which has dimension  ) intersects the space of vectors supported by   (which has dimension  ), implying that there is an eigenvector   of   with eigenvalue   which is supported on  . (This is a simplification of Huang's original argument due to Shalev Ben-David.[20])

Consider a point   maximizing  . On the one hand,  . On the other hand,   is at most the sum of absolute values of all neighbors of   in  , which is at most  . Hence  .

Constructing the signing

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Huang[1] constructed the signing recursively. When  , we can take an arbitrary signing. Given a signing   of the  -dimensional hypercube  , we construct a signing of   as follows. Partition   into two copies of  . Use   for one of them and   for the other, and assign all edges between the two copies the sign  .

The same signing can also be expressed directly. Let   be an edge of the hypercube. If   is the first coordinate on which   differ, we use the sign  .

Extensions

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The sensitivity theorem can be equivalently restated as

 

Laplante et al.[21] refined this to

 

where   is the maximum sensitivity of   at a point in  . They showed furthermore that this bound is attained at two neighboring points of the hypercube.

Aaronson, Ben-David, Kothari and Tal[22] defined a new measure, the spectral sensitivity of  , denoted  . This is the largest eigenvalue of the adjacency matrix of the sensitivity graph of  , which is the subgraph of the hypercube consisting of all sensitive edges (edges connecting two points   such that  ). They showed that Huang's proof can be decomposed into two steps:

  •  .
  •  .

Using this measure, they proved several tight relations between complexity measures of Boolean functions:   and  . Here   is the deterministic query complexity and   is the quantum query complexity.

Dafni et al.[23] extended the notions of degree and sensitivity to Boolean functions on the symmetric group and on the perfect matching association scheme, and proved analogs of the sensitivity theorem for such functions. Their proofs use a reduction to Huang's sensitivity theorem.

See also

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Notes

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References

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  • Aaronson, Scott; Ben-David, Shalev; Kothari, Robin; Rao, Shravas; Tal, Avishay (2021-06-15). Degree vs. approximate degree and Quantum implications of Huang's sensitivity theorem. ACM. pp. 1330–1342. arXiv:2010.12629. doi:10.1145/3406325.3451047. ISBN 978-1-4503-8053-9.
  • Ahmadi, Bahman; Alinaghipour, Fatemeh; Cavers, Michael S.; Fallat, Shaun; Meagher, Karen; Nasserasr, Shahla (September 2013). "Minimum number of distinct eigenvalues of graphs". Electronic Journal of Linear Algebra. 26. International Linear Algebra Society: 673–691. arXiv:1304.1205. doi:10.13001/1081-3810.1679. ISSN 1081-3810.
  • Bafna, Mitali; Lokam, Satyanarayana V.; Tavenas, Sébastien; Velingker, Ameya; Faliszewski, Piotr; Muscholl, Anca; Niedermeier, Rolf (2016). "On the Sensitivity Conjecture for Read-k Formulas". 41st International Symposium on Mathematical Foundations of Computer Science (MFCS 2016). p. 14 pages. doi:10.4230/LIPICS.MFCS.2016.16. ISSN 1868-8969.
  • Dafni, Neta; Filmus, Yuval; Lifshitz, Noam; Lindzey, Nathan; Vinyals, Marc; Lee, James R. (2021). "Complexity Measures on the Symmetric Group and Beyond (Extended Abstract)". 12th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science (ITCS) conference. p. 5 pages, 326343 bytes. doi:10.4230/LIPICS.ITCS.2021.87. ISSN 1868-8969.
  • Ben-David, Shalev (3 July 2019). "Comment #35 to Sensitivity Conjecture resolved".
  • Blum, Manuel; Impagliazzo, Russell (1987). "Generic oracles and oracle classes". 28th Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (sfcs 1987). IEEE. doi:10.1109/sfcs.1987.30.
  • Buhrman, Harry; de Wolf, Ronald (2002). "Complexity measures and decision tree complexity: a survey". Theoretical Computer Science. 288 (1). Elsevier BV: 21–43. doi:10.1016/s0304-3975(01)00144-x. ISSN 0304-3975.
  • C. S., Karthik; Tavenas, Sébastien; Lal, Akash; Akshay, S.; Saurabh, Saket; Sen, Sandeep (2016). "On the Sensitivity Conjecture for Disjunctive Normal Forms". 36th IARCS Annual Conference on Foundations of Software Technology and Theoretical Computer Science (FSTTCS 2016). p. 15 pages. doi:10.4230/LIPICS.FSTTCS.2016.15. ISSN 1868-8969.
  • Cook, Stephen; Dwork, Cynthia; Reischuk, Rüdiger (1986). "Upper and Lower Time Bounds for Parallel Random Access Machines without Simultaneous Writes". SIAM Journal on Computing. 15 (1): 87–97. doi:10.1137/0215006. ISSN 0097-5397.
  • Gotsman, Chaim; Linial, Nati (1992). "The equivalence of two problems on the cube". Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A. 61 (1). Elsevier BV: 142–146. doi:10.1016/0097-3165(92)90060-8. ISSN 0097-3165.
  • Hartmanis, Juris; Hemachandra, Lane A. (1991). "One-way functions and the nonisomorphism of NP-complete sets". Theoretical Computer Science. 81 (1): 155–163. doi:10.1016/0304-3975(91)90323-T.
  • Hatami, Pooya; Kulkarni, Raghav; Pankratov, Denis (2011). "Variations on the Sensitivity Conjecture". Theory of Computing. 1 (1): 1–27. doi:10.4086/toc.gs.2011.004. ISSN 1557-2862.
  • Huang, Hao (2019-11-01). "Induced subgraphs of hypercubes and a proof of the Sensitivity Conjecture". Annals of Mathematics. 190 (3). arXiv:1907.00847. doi:10.4007/annals.2019.190.3.6. ISSN 0003-486X.
  • Klarreich, Erica (July 25, 2019). "Decades-Old Computer Science Conjecture Solved in Two Pages". Quanta Magazine.
  • Laplante, Sophie; Naserasr, Reza; Sunny, Anupa; Wang, Zhouningxin (2023-03-07). "Sensitivity conjecture and signed hypercubes". Archive ouverte HAL. Retrieved 2024-04-25.
  • Nisan, Noam (1991). "CREW PRAMs and Decision Trees". SIAM Journal on Computing. 20 (6): 999–1007. doi:10.1137/0220062. ISSN 0097-5397.
  • Nisan, Noam; Szegedy, Mario (1994). "On the degree of boolean functions as real polynomials". Computational Complexity. 4 (4): 301–313. doi:10.1007/BF01263419. ISSN 1016-3328.
  • Simon, Hans-Ulrich (1983). "A tight Ω(loglog n)-bound on the time for parallel Ram's to compute nondegenerated boolean functions". Foundations of Computation Theory. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 158. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg. pp. 439–444. doi:10.1007/3-540-12689-9_124. ISBN 978-3-540-12689-8.
  • Tal, Avishay (2013-01-09). "Properties and applications of boolean function composition". ITCS '13: Proceedings of the 4th conference on Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science. ACM. doi:10.1145/2422436.2422485. ISBN 978-1-4503-1859-4.
  • Tardos, G. (1989). "Query complexity, or why is it difficult to separate   from   by random oracles  ?". Combinatorica. 9 (4): 385–392. doi:10.1007/BF02125350. ISSN 0209-9683.
  • Wegener, Ingo (1987). The Complexity of Boolean Functions. Stuttgart Chichester New York Brisbane [etc.]: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-91555-6.