Abstract. The class NC1 of problems solvable by bounded fan-in circuit families of logarithmic depth is known to be contained in logarithmic space L, but not much about the converse is known. In this paper we examine the structure of classes in between NC1 and L based on counting functions or, equivalently, based on arithmetic circuits. The classes PNC1 and C=NC 1, defined by a test for positivity and a test for zero, respectively, of arithmetic circuit families of logarithmic depth, sit in this complexity interval. We study the landscape of Boolean hierarchies, constant-depth oracle hierarchies, and logarithmic-depth oracle hierarchies over PNC1 and C=NC 1. We provide complete problems, obtain the upper bound L for all these hierarchies, a...
This thesis is a study of separations of some complexity classes which take place in almost all rel...
This dissertation presents some circuit complexity results and techniques. Circuit complexity is a b...
We give some characterizations of the classes P super NP [0(log super k n)]. First, we show that the...
AbstractThe class NC1 of problems solvable by bounded fan-in circuit families of logarithmic depth i...
We study under what circumstances different uniformity notions for Boolean circuits of logarithmic d...
The boolean circuit complexity classes AC 0 ⊆ AC 0[m] ⊆ TC 0 ⊆ NC 1 have been studied intensely. Oth...
Constant-depth arithmetic circuits have been defined and studied in [AAD97, ABL98]; these circuits y...
We study three different hierarchies related to the notion of counting: the polynomial time counting...
We study under what circumstances different uniformity notions for Boolean circuits of logarithmic d...
AbstractWe define the counting classes #NC1,GapNC1,PNC1, andC=NC1. We prove that boolean circuits, a...
We consider the power of single level circuits in the context of graph complexity. We first prove th...
this paper we show that the log space oracle hierarchy also collapses, that it thus does coincide wi...
Motivated by the question of how to define an analog of interactive proofs in the setting of logarit...
Boolean circuits were introduced in complexity theory to provide a model for parallel computation. A...
In [AO96], it is stated (without proof) that if NC 1 (#L) = AC 0 (#L), then the #L hierarchy col...
This thesis is a study of separations of some complexity classes which take place in almost all rel...
This dissertation presents some circuit complexity results and techniques. Circuit complexity is a b...
We give some characterizations of the classes P super NP [0(log super k n)]. First, we show that the...
AbstractThe class NC1 of problems solvable by bounded fan-in circuit families of logarithmic depth i...
We study under what circumstances different uniformity notions for Boolean circuits of logarithmic d...
The boolean circuit complexity classes AC 0 ⊆ AC 0[m] ⊆ TC 0 ⊆ NC 1 have been studied intensely. Oth...
Constant-depth arithmetic circuits have been defined and studied in [AAD97, ABL98]; these circuits y...
We study three different hierarchies related to the notion of counting: the polynomial time counting...
We study under what circumstances different uniformity notions for Boolean circuits of logarithmic d...
AbstractWe define the counting classes #NC1,GapNC1,PNC1, andC=NC1. We prove that boolean circuits, a...
We consider the power of single level circuits in the context of graph complexity. We first prove th...
this paper we show that the log space oracle hierarchy also collapses, that it thus does coincide wi...
Motivated by the question of how to define an analog of interactive proofs in the setting of logarit...
Boolean circuits were introduced in complexity theory to provide a model for parallel computation. A...
In [AO96], it is stated (without proof) that if NC 1 (#L) = AC 0 (#L), then the #L hierarchy col...
This thesis is a study of separations of some complexity classes which take place in almost all rel...
This dissertation presents some circuit complexity results and techniques. Circuit complexity is a b...
We give some characterizations of the classes P super NP [0(log super k n)]. First, we show that the...