DocumentCode
1780755
Title
Direct Product Testing
Author
Dinur, Irit ; Steurer, David
fYear
2014
fDate
11-13 June 2014
Firstpage
188
Lastpage
196
Abstract
A direct product function is a function of the form g(x1, ⋯, xk)=(g1(x1), ⋯, g(xk)). We show that the direct product property is locally testable with two queries, that is, a canonical two-query test distinguishes between direct product functions and functions that are far from direct products with constant probability. This local testing question comes up naturally in the context of PCPs, where direct products play a prominent role for gap amplification. We consider the following natural two query test for a given function f:[N]k→[M]k Two query direct product test: Choose x, y that agree on a random set A of t coordinates and accept if f(x)A=f(y)A. We provide a comprehensive analysis of this test for all parameters N, M, k, t≤O(k) and success probability δ>0. Our main result is that if a given function f:[N]k→[M]k passes the test with probability δ≥1-ε then there is a direct product function g such that P[f(x)=g(x)]≥1-O(ε). This is the first result relating success in the above (or any) test to the fraction of the domain on which f is equal to a direct product function. This test has been analyzed in previous works for the case t≪k≪N, and results show closeness of f to a direct product under a less natural measure of "approximate agreement". In the small soundness regime, we prove that if the test above passes with probability δ ≥ exp(-k), then the function agrees with a direct product function on local parts of the domain. This extends the previous range of parameters of δ≥exp(-3√k) to the entire meaningful range of δ>exp(-k).
Keywords
computational complexity; game theory; probability; query processing; PCPs; approximate agreement; canonical two-query test; constant probability; direct product function; direct product property; gap amplification; query direct product test; success probability; two-player games; Computational complexity; Conferences; Context; Decoding; Games; Polynomials; Testing; parallel repetition; probabilistically checkable proofs; property testing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computational Complexity (CCC), 2014 IEEE 29th Conference on
Conference_Location
Vancouver, BC
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CCC.2014.27
Filename
6875488
Link To Document