A Hierarchy of Polynomial Kernels

被引:0
|
作者
Witteveen, Jouke [1 ]
Bottesch, Ralph [2 ]
Torenvliet, Leen [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Amsterdam, Inst Log Language & Computat, Amsterdam, Netherlands
[2] Univ Innsbruck, Dept Comp Sci, Innsbruck, Austria
关键词
Kernelization; Parameterized complexity; Turing reductions; Truth-table reductions; Kernel lower bounds; KERNELIZATION;
D O I
10.1007/978-3-030-10801-4_39
中图分类号
TP301 [理论、方法];
学科分类号
081202 ;
摘要
In parameterized algorithmics the process of kernelization is defined as a polynomial time algorithm that transforms the instance of a given problem to an equivalent instance of a size that is limited by a function of the parameter. As, afterwards, this smaller instance can then be solved to find an answer to the original question, kernelization is often presented as a form of preprocessing. A natural generalization of kernelization is the process that allows for a number of smaller instances to be produced to provide an answer to the original problem, possibly also using negation. This generalization is called Turing kernelization. Immediately, questions of equivalence occur or, when is one form possible and not the other. These have been long standing open problems in parameterized complexity. In the present paper, we answer many of these. In particular we show that Turing kernelizations differ not only from regular kernelization, but also from intermediate forms as truth-table kernelizations. We achieve absolute results by diagonalizations and also results on natural problems depending on widely accepted complexity theoretic assumptions. In particular, we improve on known lower bounds for the kernel size of compositional problems using these assumptions.
引用
收藏
页码:504 / 518
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Interpolation with the polynomial kernels
    Elefante, Giacomo
    Erb, Wolfgang
    Marchetti, Francesco
    Perracchione, Emma
    Poggiali, Davide
    Santin, Gabriele
    DOLOMITES RESEARCH NOTES ON APPROXIMATION, 2022, 15 : 45 - 60
  • [2] CONVOLUTIONS OF POLYNOMIAL KERNELS
    Zelinka, Jiri
    MATHEMATICA SLOVACA, 2016, 66 (03) : 745 - 756
  • [3] Fast Sketching of Polynomial Kernels of Polynomial Degree
    Song, Zhao
    Woodruff, David P.
    Yu, Zheng
    Zhang, Lichen
    INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MACHINE LEARNING, VOL 139, 2021, 139
  • [4] BPP AND THE POLYNOMIAL HIERARCHY
    LAUTEMANN, C
    INFORMATION PROCESSING LETTERS, 1983, 17 (04) : 215 - 217
  • [5] EXTENSION OF POLYNOMIAL HIERARCHY
    SIMON, J
    JOURNAL OF SYMBOLIC LOGIC, 1978, 43 (02) : 361 - 362
  • [6] BQP and the Polynomial Hierarchy
    Aaronson, Scott
    STOC 2010: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2010 ACM SYMPOSIUM ON THEORY OF COMPUTING, 2010, : 141 - 150
  • [7] Refining the polynomial hierarchy
    Selivanov V.L.
    Algebra and Logic, 1999, 38 (4) : 248 - 258
  • [8] The Boolean hierarchy and the polynomial hierarchy: A closer connection
    Chang, R
    Kadin, J
    SIAM JOURNAL ON COMPUTING, 1996, 25 (02) : 340 - 354
  • [9] On problems without polynomial kernels
    Bodlaender, Hans L.
    Downey, Rodney G.
    Fellows, Michael R.
    Hermelin, Danny
    JOURNAL OF COMPUTER AND SYSTEM SCIENCES, 2009, 75 (08) : 423 - 434
  • [10] Fast Learning With Polynomial Kernels
    Lin, Shaobo
    Zeng, Jinshan
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON CYBERNETICS, 2019, 49 (10) : 3780 - 3792