We present a simple new construction of a pseudorandom bit generator. It stretches a short string of truly random bits into a long string that looks random to any algorithm from a complexity class C (e.g., P, NC, PSPACE, …) using an arbitrary function that is hard for C. This construction reveals an equivalence between the problem of proving lower bounds and the problem of generating good pseudorandom sequences. Our construction has many consequences. The most direct one is that efficient deterministic simulation of randomized algorithms is possible under much weaker assumptions than previously known. The efficiency of the simulations depends on the strength of the assumptions, and may achieve P = BPP. We believe that our results are very s...
One powerful theme in complexity theory and pseudorandomness in the past few decades has been the us...
AbstractUp to now, the known derandomization methods for BPP have been derived assuming the existenc...
A fresh look at the question of randomness was taken in the theory of computing: A distribution is p...
We present a simple new construction of a pseudorandom bit generator. It stretches a short string of...
We present a simple new construction of a pseudorandom bit generator, based on the constant depth ge...
AbstractGiven a function f:{0,1}logn→{0,1} with circuit complexity s, we construct a pseudo-random g...
Existing proofs that deduce BPP=P from circuit lower bounds convert randomized algorithms into deter...
We revisit hardness-preserving constructions of a pseudo-random function (PRF) from any length doubl...
Nisan and Wigderson in their seminal work introduced a new (conditional) pseudorandom generator cons...
We study the complexity of building pseudorandom generators (PRGs) from hard functions. We show that...
AbstractThis paper introduces a type of generalized Kolmogorov complexity and uses it as a tool to e...
We investigate the notion of pseudodeterminstic approximation algorithms. A randomized approximation...
AbstractThe concept of pseudorandomness plays an important role in cryptography. In this note, we co...
We consider two of the most fundamental theorems in Cryptography. The first, due to H˚astad et. al. ...
A recent work by Nuida and Hanaoka (in ICITS 2009) provided a proof technique for security of inform...
One powerful theme in complexity theory and pseudorandomness in the past few decades has been the us...
AbstractUp to now, the known derandomization methods for BPP have been derived assuming the existenc...
A fresh look at the question of randomness was taken in the theory of computing: A distribution is p...
We present a simple new construction of a pseudorandom bit generator. It stretches a short string of...
We present a simple new construction of a pseudorandom bit generator, based on the constant depth ge...
AbstractGiven a function f:{0,1}logn→{0,1} with circuit complexity s, we construct a pseudo-random g...
Existing proofs that deduce BPP=P from circuit lower bounds convert randomized algorithms into deter...
We revisit hardness-preserving constructions of a pseudo-random function (PRF) from any length doubl...
Nisan and Wigderson in their seminal work introduced a new (conditional) pseudorandom generator cons...
We study the complexity of building pseudorandom generators (PRGs) from hard functions. We show that...
AbstractThis paper introduces a type of generalized Kolmogorov complexity and uses it as a tool to e...
We investigate the notion of pseudodeterminstic approximation algorithms. A randomized approximation...
AbstractThe concept of pseudorandomness plays an important role in cryptography. In this note, we co...
We consider two of the most fundamental theorems in Cryptography. The first, due to H˚astad et. al. ...
A recent work by Nuida and Hanaoka (in ICITS 2009) provided a proof technique for security of inform...
One powerful theme in complexity theory and pseudorandomness in the past few decades has been the us...
AbstractUp to now, the known derandomization methods for BPP have been derived assuming the existenc...
A fresh look at the question of randomness was taken in the theory of computing: A distribution is p...