18th Annual IEEE Conference on Computational Complexity (CCC'03) Hardness vs. Randomness within Alternating Time Aarhus, Denmark July 07-July 10 ISBN: 0-7695-1879-6
We study the complexity of building pseudorandom generators (PRGs) with logarithmic seed length from hard functions. We show that, starting from a function ? : {0, 1\} ^1 ? {0, 1} that is mildly hard on average, i.e. every circuit of size 2(l) fails to compute ? on at least a 1/poly(l) fraction of inputs, we can build a PRG : {0, 1\} ^{\text{O(log n)}} ? {0, 1}n computable in ATIME(O(1), log n) = alternating time O(log n) with O(1) alternations. Such a PRG implies BP ? AC0 = AC0 under DLOGTIME-uniformity. On the negative side, we prove a tight lower bound on black-box PRG constructions that are based on worst-case hard functions. We also prove a tight lower bound on blackbox worst-case hardness amplification, which is the problem of producing an average-case hard function starting from a worst-case hard one. These lower bounds are obtained by showing that constant depth circuits cannot compute extractors and list-decodable codes.
Citation:
Emanuele Viola, "Hardness vs. Randomness within Alternating Time," ccc, pp.53, 18th Annual IEEE Conference on Computational Complexity (CCC'03), 2003 Usage of this product signifies your acceptance of the Terms of Use. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||