Hardness magnification reduces major complexity separations (such as EXP ⊈ NC1) to proving lower bounds for some natural problem Q against weak circuit models. Several recent works [11, 13, 14, 40, 42, 43, 46] have established results of this form. In the most intriguing cases, the required lower bound is known for problems that appear to be significantly easier than Q, while Q itself is susceptible to lower bounds, but these are not yet sufficient for magnification. In this work, we provide more examples of this phenomenon and investigate the prospects of proving new lower bounds using this approach. In particular, we consider the following essential questions associated with the hardness magnification program: – Does hardness magnif...
We formalize and study the question of whether there are inherent difficulties to showing lower boun...
We show that proving mildly super-linear lower bounds on non-commutative arithmetic circuits implies...
This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in th...
Hardness magnification reduces major complexity separations (such as EXP ⊈ NC^1) to proving lower bo...
Hardness magnification reduces major complexity separations (such as EXP ⊈ NC^1) to proving lower bo...
We show that for several natural problems of interest, complexity lower bounds that are barely non-t...
This thesis focuses on problems which themselves encode questions about circuits or algorithms, also...
We consider a general approach to the hoary problem of (im)proving circuit lower bounds. We define n...
This article continues the development of hardness magnification, an emerging area that proposes a n...
This work continues the development of hardness magnification. The latter proposes a new strategy fo...
We show that proving mildly super-linear lower bounds on non-commutative arithmetic circuits implies...
© 2019 IEEE. In the Minimum Circuit Size Problem (MCSP[s(m)]), we ask if there is a circuit of size ...
We study the task of transforming a hard function f, with which any small circuit disagrees on (1 − ...
Hardness amplification is the fundamental task of converting a δ-hard function f: {0, 1}n → {0, 1} i...
We formalize and study the question of whether there are inherent difficulties to showing lower boun...
We formalize and study the question of whether there are inherent difficulties to showing lower boun...
We show that proving mildly super-linear lower bounds on non-commutative arithmetic circuits implies...
This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in th...
Hardness magnification reduces major complexity separations (such as EXP ⊈ NC^1) to proving lower bo...
Hardness magnification reduces major complexity separations (such as EXP ⊈ NC^1) to proving lower bo...
We show that for several natural problems of interest, complexity lower bounds that are barely non-t...
This thesis focuses on problems which themselves encode questions about circuits or algorithms, also...
We consider a general approach to the hoary problem of (im)proving circuit lower bounds. We define n...
This article continues the development of hardness magnification, an emerging area that proposes a n...
This work continues the development of hardness magnification. The latter proposes a new strategy fo...
We show that proving mildly super-linear lower bounds on non-commutative arithmetic circuits implies...
© 2019 IEEE. In the Minimum Circuit Size Problem (MCSP[s(m)]), we ask if there is a circuit of size ...
We study the task of transforming a hard function f, with which any small circuit disagrees on (1 − ...
Hardness amplification is the fundamental task of converting a δ-hard function f: {0, 1}n → {0, 1} i...
We formalize and study the question of whether there are inherent difficulties to showing lower boun...
We formalize and study the question of whether there are inherent difficulties to showing lower boun...
We show that proving mildly super-linear lower bounds on non-commutative arithmetic circuits implies...
This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in th...