Computational Complexity

2024
Barak, Boaz, Yael Kalai, Ran Raz, Salil Vadhan, and Nisheeth Vishnoi. “On the Works of Avi Widgerson.” In The Abel Prize 2018-2022 (eds. Helge Holden and Ragni Piene). 2023rd ed. Springer, Cham, 2024. Publisher's VersionAbstract ArXiv 2023.pdf
Doron, Dean, Jack Murtagh, Salil Vadhan, and David Zuckerman. “Small-space spectral sparsification via bounded-independence sampling.” ACM Transactions on Computation Theory (2024). Publisher's VersionAbstract
Version History:
NB: Some earlier versions published as "Spectral sparsification via bounded-independence sampling".

We give a deterministic, nearly logarithmic-space algorithm for mild spectral sparsification of undirected graphs. Given a weighted, undirected graph \(G\) on \(n\) vertices described by a binary string of length \(N\), an integer \(k \leq \log n \) and an error parameter \(\varepsilon > 0\), our algorithm runs in space \(\tilde{O}(k \log(N ^. w_{max}/w_{min}))\) where \(w_{max}\) and \(w_{min}\) are the maximum and minimum edge weights in \(G\), and produces a weighted graph \(H\) with \(\tilde{O}(n^{1+2/k} / \varepsilon^2)\)expected edges that spectrally approximates \(G\), in the sense of Spielmen and Teng [ST04], up to an error of \(\varepsilon\).

Our algorithm is based on a new bounded-independence analysis of Spielman and Srivastava's effective resistance based edge sampling algorithm [SS08] and uses results from recent work on space-bounded Laplacian solvers [MRSV17]. In particular, we demonstrate an inherent tradeoff (via upper and lower bounds) between the amount of (bounded) independence used in the edge sampling algorithm, denoted by \(k\) above, and the resulting sparsity that can be achieved.

ECCC 2020.pdf ICALP 2020.pdf ACM 2023.pdf
2023
Casacuberta, Sílvia, Cynthia Dwork, and Salil Vadhan. “Complexity-theoretic implications of multicalibration” (2023). ArXiv VersionAbstract

We present connections between the recent literature on multigroup fairness for prediction algorithms and classical results in computational complexity. Multiaccurate predictors are correct in expectation on each member of an arbitrary collection of pre-specified sets. Multicalibrated predictors satisfy a stronger condition: they are calibrated on each set in the collection.

Multiaccuracy is equivalent to a regularity notion for functions defined by Trevisan, Tulsiani, and Vadhan (2009). They showed that, given a class F of (possibly simple) functions, an arbitrarily complex function g can be approximated by a low-complexity function h that makes a small number of oracle calls to members of F, where the notion of approximation requires that h cannot be distinguished from g by members of F. This complexity-theoretic Regularity Lemma is known to have implications in different areas, including in complexity theory, additive number theory, information theory, graph theory, and cryptography. Starting from the stronger notion of multicalibration, we obtain stronger and more general versions of a number of applications of the Regularity Lemma, including the Hardcore Lemma, the Dense Model Theorem, and the equivalence of conditional pseudo-min-entropy and unpredictability. For example, we show that every boolean function (regardless of its hardness) has a small collection of disjoint hardcore sets, where the sizes of those hardcore sets are related to how balanced the function is on corresponding pieces of an efficient partition of the domain.

ComplexityTheoretic ArXiv 2023.pdf
2021
Doron, Dean, Raghu Meka, Omer Reingold, Avishay Tal, and Salil Vadhan. “Pseudorandom generators for read-once monotone branching programs.” APPROX/ RANDOM 2021. Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics (LIPIcs), Schloss Dagstuhl Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik, 2021. Publisher's VersionAbstract

Version History: Originally published as "Monotone branching programs: pseudorandomness and circuit complexity". 

Previously published as "Pseudorandom generators for read-once monotone branching programs", Electronic Colloquium on Computational Complexity (ECCC) Vol. 2021, Issue 18. Linked here: https://eccc.weizmann.ac.il/report/2021/018/

Abstract: Motivated by the derandomization of space-bounded computation, there has been a long line of work on constructing pseudorandom generators (PRGs) against various forms of read-once branching programs (ROBPs), with a goal of improving the \(O(\log^2n)\) seed length of Nisan’s classic construction to the optimal \(O(\log n)\).

In this work, we construct an explicit PRG with seed length \(\tilde{O}(\log n)\) for constant-width ROBPs that are monotone, meaning that the states at each time step can be ordered so that edges with the same labels never cross each other. Equivalently, for each fixed input, the transition functions are a monotone function of the state. This result is complementary to a line of work that gave PRGs with seed length \(O(\log n)\) for (ordered) permutation ROBPs of constant width, since the monotonicity constraint can be seen as the “opposite” of the permutation constraint.

Our PRG also works for monotone ROBPs that can read the input bits in any order, which are strictly more powerful than read-once \(\mathsf{AC^0}\). Our PRG achieves better parameters (in terms of the dependence on the depth of the circuit) than the best previous pseudorandom generator for read-once \(\mathsf{AC^0}\), due to Doron, Hatami, and Hoza.

Our pseudorandom generator construction follows Ajtai and Wigderson’s approach of iterated pseudorandom restrictions. We give a randomness-efficient width-reduction process which proves that the branching program simplifies to an \(O(\log n)\)-junta after only \(O(\log \log n)\) independent applications of the Forbes-Kelley pseudorandom restrictions.

ECCC 2021.pdf ECCC 2021 rev1.pdf APPROX-RANDOM 2021.pdf
Pyne, Edward, and Salil Vadhan. “Pseudodistributions that beat all pseudorandom generators.” 36th Annual Computational Complexity Conference (CCC '21) . Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics (LIPIcs), Schloss Dagstuhl Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik, 2021. Publisher's VersionAbstract

Version History: Full Version posted as ECC TR21-019. Invited to Theory of Computing Special Issue on CCC '21.

Abstract:

A recent paper of Braverman, Cohen, and Garg (STOC 2018) introduced the concept of a pseudorandom pseudodistribution generator (PRPG), which amounts to a pseudorandom generator (PRG) whose outputs are accompanied with real coefficients that scale the acceptance probabilities of any potential distinguisher. They gave an explicit construction of PRPGs for ordered branching programs whose seed length has a better dependence on the error parameter  than the classic PRG construction of Nisan (STOC 1990 and Combinatorica 1992).

In this work, we give an explicit construction of PRPGs that achieve parameters that are impossible to achieve by a PRG. In particular, we construct a PRPG for ordered permutation branching programs of unbounded width with a single accept state that has seed length \(\tilde{O}(\log^{3/2}n)\)  for error parameter \( \epsilon = 1/ \mathrm{poly}(n)\), where \(n\) is the input length. In contrast, recent work of Hoza et al. (ITCS 2021) shows that any PRG for this model requires seed length \( \Omega(\log^2n)\) to achieve error \( \epsilon = 1/ \mathrm{poly}(n)\).

As a corollary, we obtain explicit PRPGs with seed length \(\tilde{O}(\log^{3/2}n)\)  and error \( \epsilon = 1/ \mathrm{poly}(n)\) for ordered permutation branching programs of width \(w = \mathrm{poly}(n) \)with an arbitrary number of accept states. Previously, seed length \(o(\log^2n)\) was only known when both the width and the reciprocal of the error are subpolynomial, i.e. \(w= n^{o(1)} \) and \(\epsilon = 1/n^{o(1)}\)(Braverman, Rao, Raz, Yehudayoff, FOCS 2010 and SICOMP 2014).

The starting point for our results are the recent space-efficient algorithms for estimating random-walk probabilities in directed graphs by Ahmadenijad, Kelner, Murtagh, Peebles, Sidford, and Vadhan (FOCS 2020), which are based on spectral graph theory and space-efficient Laplacian solvers. We interpret these algorithms as giving PRPGs with large seed length, which we then derandomize to obtain our results. We also note that this approach gives a simpler proof of the original result of Braverman, Cohen, and Garg, as independently discovered by Cohen, Doron, Renard, Sberlo, and Ta-Shma (personal communication, January 2021).

ECCC 2021.pdf CCC 2021.pdf
Hoza, William M., Edward Pyne, and Salil Vadhan. “Pseudorandom generators for unbounded-width permutation branching programs.” 12th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science (ITCS '21) . Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics (LIPIcs), 2021. Publisher's VersionAbstract

Version History: 

Preliminary version posted on ECCC TR20-138 (PDF version attached as ECCC 2020).

Talks: The ITCS talk for this paper, presented by Edward Pyne, is currently available on YouTube; click the embedded link to view. 

We prove that the Impagliazzo-Nisan-Wigderson [Impagliazzo et al., 1994] pseudorandom generator (PRG) fools ordered (read-once) permutation branching programs of unbounded width with a seed length of \(\tilde{O} (\log d + \log n ⋅ \log(1/\epsilon))\), assuming the program has only one accepting vertex in the final layer. Here, \(n\) is the length of the program, \(d\) is the degree (equivalently, the alphabet size), and \(\epsilon\) is the error of the PRG. In contrast, we show that a randomly chosen generator requires seed length \(\Omega (n \log d)\) to fool such unbounded-width programs. Thus, this is an unusual case where an explicit construction is "better than random."

Except when the program’s width \(w\) is very small, this is an improvement over prior work. For example, when \(w = \mathrm{poly} (n)\) and \(d = 2\), the best prior PRG for permutation branching programs was simply Nisan’s PRG [Nisan, 1992], which fools general ordered branching programs with seed length \(O (\log (wn/\epsilon) \log n)\). We prove a seed length lower bound of \(\tilde{\Omega} (\log d + \log n ⋅ \log(1/\epsilon)) \)for fooling these unbounded-width programs, showing that our seed length is near-optimal. In fact, when\( \epsilon ≤ 1/\log n\), our seed length is within a constant factor of optimal. Our analysis of the INW generator uses the connection between the PRG and the derandomized square of Rozenman and Vadhan [Rozenman and Vadhan, 2005] and the recent analysis of the latter in terms of unit-circle approximation by Ahmadinejad et al. [Ahmadinejad et al., 2020].

ECCC 2020.pdf ITCS 2021.pdf
Murtagh, Jack, Omer Reingold, Aaron Sidford, and Salil Vadhan. “Deterministic approximation of random walks in small space.” Theory of Computing Special Issue on APPROX-RANDOM '19 17(4) (2021): 1-35. Publisher's VersionAbstract
Version History: v1, 15 Mar. 2019: https://arxiv.org/abs/1903.06361v1
v2 in ArXiv, 25 Nov. 2019: https://arxiv.org/abs/1903.06361v2
 
Prior Published Version (APPROX-RANDOM 2019), 20 Sep 2019: 
In Approximation, Randomization, and Combinatorial Optimization. Algorithms and Techniques (APPROX/RANDOM 2019), Dimitris Achlioptas and László A. Végh (Eds.). Vol. 145. Cambridge, Massachusetts (MIT): Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics (LIPIcs), 2019.
 

We give a deterministic, nearly logarithmic-space algorithm that given an undirected graph \(G\), a positive integer \(r\), and a set \(S\) of vertices, approximates the conductance of \(S\) in the \(r\)-step random walk on \(G\) to within a factor of \(1+ϵ\), where \(ϵ > 0\) is an arbitrarily small constant. More generally, our algorithm computes an \(ϵ\)-spectral approximation to the normalized Laplacian of the \(r\)-step walk. Our algorithm combines the derandomized square graph operation (Rozenman and Vadhan, 2005), which we recently used for solving Laplacian systems in nearly logarithmic space (Murtagh, Reingold, Sidford, and Vadhan, 2017), with ideas from (Cheng, Cheng, Liu, Peng, and Teng, 2015), which gave an algorithm that is time-efficient (while ours is space-efficient) and randomized (while ours is deterministic) for the case of even \(r\) (while ours works for all \(r\)). Along the way, we provide some new results that generalize technical machinery and yield improvements over previous work. First, we obtain a nearly linear-time randomized algorithm for computing a spectral approximation to the normalized Laplacian for odd \(r\). Second, we define and analyze a generalization of the derandomized square for irregular graphs and for sparsifying the product of two distinct graphs. As part of this generalization, we also give a strongly explicit construction of expander graphs of every size.

ArXiv2019.pdf ArXiv 2019 v2.pdf APPROX-RANDOM 2019 TOC 2020.pdf TOC 2021.pdf
2020
Haitner, Iftach, Omer Reingold, Salil Vadhan, and Hoeteck Wee. “Inaccessible entropy I: Inaccessible entropy generators and statistically hiding commitments from one-way functions.” arXiv: 2010.05586 [cs.CR] (2020). ArXiv VersionAbstract

Version History: Full version of part of an STOC 2009 paper.

We put forth a new computational notion of entropy, measuring the (in)feasibility of sampling high-entropy strings that are consistent with a given generator. Specifically, the \(i\)'th output block of a generator \(\mathsf{G}\) has accessible entropy at most \(k\) if the following holds: when conditioning on its prior coin tosses, no polynomial-time strategy \(\mathsf{\widetilde{G}}\) can generate valid output for \(\mathsf{G}\)'s \(i \)'th output block with entropy greater than \(k\). A generator has inaccessible entropy if the total accessible entropy (summed over the blocks) is noticeably smaller than the real entropy of \(\mathsf{G}\)'s output.

As an application of the above notion, we improve upon the result of Haitner, Nguyen, Ong, Reingold, and Vadhan [Sicomp '09], presenting a much simpler and more efficient construction of statistically hiding commitment schemes from arbitrary one-way functions.

ArXiv 2020.pdf
Ahmadinejad, AmirMahdi, Jonathan Kelner, Jack Murtagh, John Peebles, Aaron Sidford, and Salil Vadhan. “High-precision estimation of random walks in small space.” 61st Annual IEEE Symposium on the Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS 2020). IEEE, 2020. Publisher's VersionAbstract
Version History: 
arXiv version (2019): http://arxiv.org/abs/1912.04524
Updated version (Mar 2022): https://arxiv.org/abs/1912.04524 (contains corrections to analysis of derandomized square in proof of Thm 5.9)
 
Talks: View a talk on this paper presented by by John Peebles at FOCS 2020.
 
In this paper, we provide a deterministic \(\tilde{O}(\log N)\)-space algorithm for estimating the random walk probabilities on Eulerian directed graphs (and thus also undirected graphs) to within inverse polynomial additive error \((ϵ = 1/\mathrm{poly}(N)) \) where \(N\) is the length of the input. Previously, this problem was known to be solvable by a randomized algorithm using space \(O (\log N)\) (Aleliunas et al., FOCS '79) and by a deterministic algorithm using space \(O (\log^{3/2} N)\) (Saks and Zhou, FOCS '95 and JCSS '99), both of which held for arbitrary directed graphs but had not been improved even for undirected graphs. We also give improvements on the space complexity of both of these previous algorithms for non-Eulerian directed graphs when the error is negligible \((ϵ=1/N^{ω(1)})\), generalizing what Hoza and Zuckerman (FOCS '18) recently showed for the special case of distinguishing whether a random walk probability is 0 or greater than ϵ.

We achieve these results by giving new reductions between powering Eulerian random-walk matrices and inverting Eulerian Laplacian matrices, providing a new notion of spectral approximation for Eulerian graphs that is preserved under powering, and giving the first deterministic \(\tilde{O}(\log N)\)-space algorithm for inverting Eulerian Laplacian matrices. The latter algorithm builds on the work of Murtagh et al. (FOCS '17) that gave a deterministic \(\tilde{O}(\log N)\)-space algorithm for inverting undirected Laplacian matrices, and the work of Cohen et al. (FOCS '19) that gave a randomized \(\tilde{O} (N)\)-time algorithm for inverting Eulerian Laplacian matrices. A running theme throughout these contributions is an analysis of "cycle-lifted graphs," where we take a graph and "lift" it to a new graph whose adjacency matrix is the tensor product of the original adjacency matrix and a directed cycle (or variants of one).
ARXIV 2019.pdf FOCS 2020.pdf ArXiv 2022.pdf
Haitner, Iftach, Thomas Holenstein, Omer Reingold, Salil Vadhan, and Hoeteck Wee. “Inaccessible entropy II: IE functions and universal one-way hashing.” Theory of Computing 16, no. 8 (2020): 1-55. Publisher's VersionAbstract

Version History: published earlier in Henri Gilbert, ed., Advances in Cryptology—EUROCRYPT ‘10, Lecture Notes on Computer Science, as "Universal one-way hash functions via inaccessible entropy": 

https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-642-13190-5_31

 

This paper revisits the construction of Universal One-Way Hash Functions (UOWHFs) from any one-way function due to Rompel (STOC 1990). We give a simpler construction of UOWHFs, which also obtains better efficiency and security. The construction exploits a strong connection to the recently introduced notion of inaccessible entropy (Haitner et al. STOC 2009). With this perspective, we observe that a small tweak of any one-way function \(f\) is already a weak form of a UOWHF: Consider \(F(x', i)\) that outputs the \(i\)-bit long prefix of \(f(x)\). If \(F\) were a UOWHF then given a random \(x\) and \(i\) it would be hard to come up with \(x' \neq x\) such that \(F(x, i) = F(x', i)\). While this may not be the case, we show (rather easily) that it is hard to sample \(x'\) with almost full entropy among all the possible such values of \(x'\). The rest of our construction simply amplifies and exploits this basic property.

With this and other recent works, we have that the constructions of three fundamental cryptographic primitives (Pseudorandom Generators, Statistically Hiding Commitments and UOWHFs) out of one-way functions are to a large extent unified. In particular, all three constructions rely on and manipulate computational notions of entropy in similar ways. Pseudorandom Generators rely on the well-established notion of pseudoentropy, whereas Statistically Hiding Commitments and UOWHFs rely on the newer notion of inaccessible entropy.

EUROCRYPT2010.pdf ToC 2020.pdf
2019
Vadhan, Salil. “Computational entropy.” In Providing Sound Foundations for Cryptography: On the Work of Shafi Goldwasser and Silvio Micali (Oded Goldreich, Ed.), 693-726. ACM, 2019. Publisher's VersionAbstract

In this survey, we present several computational analogues of entropy and illustrate how they are useful for constructing cryptographic primitives. Specifically, we focus on constructing pseudorandom generators and statistically hiding commitments from arbitrary one-way functions, and demonstrate that:

  1. The security properties of these (and other) cryptographic primitives can be understood in terms of various computational analogues of entropy, and in particular how these computational measures of entropy can be very different from real, information-theoretic entropy.
  2. It can be shown that every one-way function directly exhibits some gaps between real entropy and the various computational entropies.
  3. Thus we can construct the desired cryptographic primitives by amplifying and manipulating the entropy gaps in a one-way function, through forms of repetition and hashing.

The constructions we present (which are from the past decade) are much simpler and more efficient than the original ones, and are based entirely on natural manipulations of new notions of computational entropy. The two constructions are "dual" to each other, whereby the construction of pseudorandom generators relies on a form of computational entropy ("pseudoentropy") being larger than the real entropy, while the construction of statistically hiding commitments relies on a form of computational entropy ("accessible entropy") being smaller than the real entropy. Beyond that difference, the two constructions share a common structure, using a very similar sequence of manipulations of real and computational entropy. As a warmup, we also "deconstruct" the classic construction of pseudorandom generators from one-way permutations using the modern language of computational entropy.

This survey is written in honor of Shafi Goldwasser and Silvio Micali.

 

ACM-2019-Computational Entropy.pdf
Balcer, Victor, and Salil Vadhan. “Differential privacy on finite computers.” Journal of Privacy and Confidentiality 9, no. 2 (2019). Publisher's VersionAbstract

Version History: 

Also presented at TPDP 2017; preliminary version posted as arXiv:1709.05396 [cs.DS].

2018: Published in Anna R. Karlin, editor, 9th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science Conference (ITCS 2018), volume 94 of Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics (LIPIcs), pp 43:1-43:21. http://drops.dagstuhl.de/opus/frontdoor.php?source_opus=8353

We consider the problem of designing and analyzing differentially private algorithms that can be implemented on discrete models of computation in strict polynomial time, motivated by known attacks on floating point implementations of real-arithmetic differentially private algorithms (Mironov, CCS 2012) and the potential for timing attacks on expected polynomial-time algorithms. As a case study, we examine the basic problem of approximating the histogram of a categorical dataset over a possibly large data universe \(X\). The classic Laplace Mechanism (Dwork, McSherry, Nissim, Smith, TCC 2006 and J. Privacy & Confidentiality 2017) does not satisfy our requirements, as it is based on real arithmetic, and natural discrete analogues, such as the Geometric Mechanism (Ghosh, Roughgarden, Sundarajan, STOC 2009 and SICOMP 2012), take time at least linear in \(|X|\), which can be exponential in the bit length of the input.

In this paper, we provide strict polynomial-time discrete algorithms for approximate histograms whose simultaneous accuracy (the maximum error over all bins) matches that of the Laplace Mechanism up to constant factors, while retaining the same (pure) differential privacy guarantee. One of our algorithms produces a sparse histogram as output. Its “per-bin accuracy” (the error on individual bins) is worse than that of the Laplace Mechanism by a factor of \(\log |X|\), but we prove a lower bound showing that this is necessary for any algorithm that produces a sparse histogram. A second algorithm avoids this lower bound, and matches the per-bin accuracy of the Laplace Mechanism, by producing a compact and efficiently computable representation of a dense histogram; it is based on an \((n + 1)\)-wise independent implementation of an appropriately clamped version of the Discrete Geometric Mechanism.

JPC2019.pdf ITCS2018.pdf ArXiv2018.pdf
Agrawal, Rohit, Yi-Hsiu Chen, Thibaut Horel, and Salil Vadhan. “Unifying computational entropies via Kullback-Leibler divergence.” In Advances in Cryptology: CRYPTO 2019, A. Boldyreva and D. Micciancio, (Eds), 11693:831-858. Springer Verlag, Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 2019. Publisher's VersionAbstract
Version History: 
arXiv, first posted Feb 2019, most recently updated Aug 2019: https://arxiv.org/abs/1902.11202
 
We introduce hardness in relative entropy, a new notion of hardness for search problems which on the one hand is satisfied by all one-way functions and on the other hand implies both next-block pseudoentropy and inaccessible entropy, two forms of computational entropy used in recent constructions of pseudorandom generators and statistically hiding commitment schemes, respectively. Thus, hardness in relative entropy unifies the latter two notions of computational entropy and sheds light on the apparent “duality” between them. Additionally, it yields a more modular and illuminating proof that one-way functions imply next-block inaccessible entropy, similar in structure to the proof that one-way functions imply next-block pseudoentropy (Vadhan and Zheng, STOC ‘12).
CRYPTO 2019.pdf ArXiv2019.pdf
2018
Murtagh, Jack, and Salil Vadhan. “The complexity of computing the optimal composition of differential privacy.” Theory of Computing 14 (2018): 1-35. Publisher's VersionAbstract

Version History: Full version posted on CoRR, abs/1507.03113, July 2015Additional version published in Proceedings of the 13th IACR Theory of Cryptography Conference (TCC '16-A)

In the study of differential privacy, composition theorems (starting with the original paper of Dwork, McSherry, Nissim, and Smith (TCC '06)) bound the degradation of privacy when composing several differentially private algorithms. Kairouz, Oh, and Viswanath (ICML '15) showed how to compute the optimal bound for composing \(k\) arbitrary (\(\epsilon\),\(\delta\))- differentially private algorithms. We characterize the optimal composition for the more general case of \(k\) arbitrary (\(\epsilon_1\) , \(\delta_1\) ), . . . , (\(\epsilon_k\) , \(\delta_k\) )-differentially private algorithms where the privacy parameters may differ for each algorithm in the composition. We show that computing the optimal composition in general is \(\#\)P-complete. Since computing optimal composition exactly is infeasible (unless FP\(=\)\(\#\)P), we give an approximation algorithm that computes the composition to arbitrary accuracy in polynomial time. The algorithm is a modification of Dyer’s dynamic programming approach to approximately counting solutions to knapsack problems (STOC '03).

ArXiv2016.pdf TCC2016-A.pdf TOC2018.pdf
Chen, Yi-Hsiu, Mika Goos, Salil P. Vadhan, and Jiapeng Zhang. “A tight lower bound for entropy flattening.” In 33rd Computational Complexity Conference (CCC 2018), 102:23:21-23:28. Schloss Dagstuhl-Leibniz-Zentrum fuer Informatik: Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics (LIPIcs), 2018. Publisher's VersionAbstract

Version History: Preliminary version posted as ECCC TR18-119.

We study entropy flattening: Given a circuit \(C_X\) implicitly describing an n-bit source \(X\) (namely, \(X\) is the output of \(C_X \)  on a uniform random input), construct another circuit \(C_Y\) describing a source \(Y\) such that (1) source \(Y\) is nearly flat (uniform on its support), and (2) the Shannon entropy of \(Y\) is monotonically related to that of \(X\). The standard solution is to have \(C_Y\) evaluate \(C_X\) altogether \(\Theta(n^2)\) times on independent inputs and concatenate the results (correctness follows from the asymptotic equipartition property). In this paper, we show that this is optimal among black-box constructions: Any circuit \(C_Y\) for entropy flattening that repeatedly queries \(C_X\) as an oracle requires \(\Omega(n^2)\)queries.

Entropy flattening is a component used in the constructions of pseudorandom generators and other cryptographic primitives from one-way functions [12, 22, 13, 6, 11, 10, 7, 24]. It is also used in reductions between problems complete for statistical zero-knowledge [19, 23, 4, 25]. The \(\Theta(n^2)\) query complexity is often the main efficiency bottleneck. Our lower bound can be viewed as a step towards proving that the current best construction of pseudorandom generator from arbitrary one-way functions by Vadhan and Zheng (STOC 2012) has optimal efficiency.

CCC2018.pdf
2017
Haitner, Iftach, and Salil Vadhan. “The Many Entropies in One-way Functions.” In Tutorials on the Foundations of Cryptography, 159-217. Springer, Yehuda Lindell, ed. 2017. Publisher's VersionAbstract

Version History: 

Earlier versions: May 2017: ECCC TR 17-084

Dec. 2017: ECCC TR 17-084 (revised)

Computational analogues of information-theoretic notions have given rise to some of the most interesting phenomena in the theory of computation. For example, computational indistinguishability, Goldwasser and Micali [9], which is the computational analogue of statistical distance, enabled the bypassing of Shannon’s impossibility results on perfectly secure encryption, and provided the basis for the computational theory of pseudorandomness. Pseudoentropy, Håstad, Impagliazzo, Levin, and Luby [17], a computational analogue of entropy, was the key to the fundamental result establishing the equivalence of pseudorandom generators and one-way functions, and has become a basic concept in complexity theory and cryptography.

This tutorial discusses two rather recent computational notions of entropy, both of which can be easily found in any one-way function, the most basic cryptographic primitive. The first notion is next-block pseudoentropy, Haitner, Reingold, and Vadhan [14], a refinement of pseudoentropy that enables simpler and more ecient construction of pseudorandom generators. The second is inaccessible entropy, Haitner, Reingold, Vadhan, andWee [11], which relates to unforgeability and is used to construct simpler and more efficient universal one-way hash functions and statistically hiding commitments.

SPRINGER 2017.pdf ECCC 5-2017.pdf ECCC 12-2017.pdf
Vadhan, Salil. “The Complexity of Differential Privacy.” In Tutorials on the Foundations of Cryptography, 347-450. Springer, Yehuda Lindell, ed. 2017. Publisher's VersionAbstract

Version History: 

August 2016: Manuscript v1 (see files attached)

March 2017: Manuscript v2 (see files attached); Errata

April 2017: Published Version (in Tutorials on the Foundations of Cryptography; see Publisher's Version link and also SPRINGER 2017.PDF, below) 

 

Differential privacy is a theoretical framework for ensuring the privacy of individual-level data when performing statistical analysis of privacy-sensitive datasets. This tutorial provides an introduction to and overview of differential privacy, with the goal of conveying its deep connections to a variety of other topics in computational complexity, cryptography, and theoretical computer science at large. This tutorial is written in celebration of Oded Goldreich’s 60th birthday, starting from notes taken during a minicourse given by the author and Kunal Talwar at the 26th McGill Invitational Workshop on Computational Complexity [1].

 

SPRINGER 2017.pdf ERRATA 2017.pdf MANUSCRIPT 2017.pdf MANUSCRIPT 2016.pdf
Steinke, Thomas, Salil Vadhan, and Andrew Wan. “Pseudorandomness and Fourier growth bounds for width 3 branching programs.” Theory of Computing – Special Issue on APPROX-RANDOM 2014 13, no. 12 (2017): 1-50. Publisher's VersionAbstract

Version History: a conference version of this paper appeared in the Proceedings of the 18th International Workshop on Randomization and Computation (RANDOM'14). Full version posted as ECCC TR14-076 and arXiv:1405.7028 [cs.CC].

We present an explicit pseudorandom generator for oblivious, read-once, width-3 branching programs, which can read their input bits in any order. The generator has seed length \(Õ(\log^3 n)\).The previously best known seed length for this model is \(n^{1/2+o(1)}\) due to Impagliazzo, Meka, and Zuckerman (FOCS ’12). Our work generalizes a recent result of Reingold, Steinke, and Vadhan (RANDOM ’13) for permutation branching programs. The main technical novelty underlying our generator is a new bound on the Fourier growth of width-3, oblivious, read-once branching programs. Specifically, we show that for any \(f : \{0, 1\}^n → \{0, 1\}\) computed by such a branching program, and \(k ∈ [n]\),

 \(\displaystyle\sum_{s⊆[n]:|s|=k} \big| \hat{f}[s] \big | ≤n^2 ·(O(\log n))^k\),

where \(\hat{f}[s] = \mathbb{E}_U [f[U] \cdot (-1)^{s \cdot U}]\) is the standard Fourier transform over \(\mathbb{Z}^n_2\). The base \(O(\log n)\) of the Fourier growth is tight up to a factor of \(\log \log n\).

TOC 2017.pdf APPROX-RANDOM 2014.pdf ArXiv 2014.pdf
Vadhan., Salil P.On learning vs. refutation.” 30th Conference on Learning Theory (COLT `17), 2017, 65, 1835-1848. Publisher's VersionAbstract
Building on the work of Daniely et al. (STOC 2014, COLT 2016), we study the connection between computationally efficient PAC learning and refutation of constraint satisfaction problems. Specifically, we prove that for every concept class \(\mathcal{P }\) , PAC-learning \(\mathcal{P}\) is polynomially equivalent to “random-right-hand-side-refuting” (“RRHS-refuting”) a dual class \(\mathcal{P}^∗ \), where RRHS-refutation of a class \(Q\) refers to refuting systems of equations where the constraints are (worst-case) functions from the class \( Q\) but the right-hand-sides of the equations are uniform and independent random bits. The reduction from refutation to PAC learning can be viewed as an abstraction of (part of) the work of Daniely, Linial, and Shalev-Schwartz (STOC 2014). The converse, however, is new, and is based on a combination of techniques from pseudorandomness (Yao ‘82) with boosting (Schapire ‘90). In addition, we show that PAC-learning the class of \(DNF\) formulas is polynomially equivalent to PAC-learning its dual class \(DNF ^∗\) , and thus PAC-learning \(DNF\) is equivalent to RRHS-refutation of \(DNF\) , suggesting an avenue to obtain stronger lower bounds for PAC-learning \(DNF\) than the quasipolynomial lower bound that was obtained by Daniely and Shalev-Schwartz (COLT 2016) assuming the hardness of refuting \(k\)-SAT.
COLT 17.pdf
Murtagh, Jack, Omer Reingold, Aaron Sidford, and Salil Vadhan. “Derandomization beyond connectivity: Undirected Laplacian systems in nearly logarithmic space.58th Annual IEEE Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS `17), 2017. Publisher's VersionAbstract
Version History
ArXiv, 15 August 2017 https://arxiv.org/abs/1708.04634
 
We give a deterministic \(\overline{O} (\log n)\)-space algorithm for approximately solving linear systems given by Laplacians of undirected graphs, and consequently also approximating hitting times, commute times, and escape probabilities for undirected graphs. Previously, such systems were known to be solvable by randomized algorithms using \(O(\log n)\) space (Doron, Le Gall, and Ta-Shma, 2017) and hence by deterministic algorithms using \( O(\log^{3/2} n)\)  space (Saks and Zhou, FOCS 1995 and JCSS 1999).

Our algorithm combines ideas from time-efficient Laplacian solvers (Spielman and Teng, STOC '04; Peng and Spielman, STOC '14) with ideas used to show that Undirected S-T Connectivity is in deterministic logspace (Reingold, STOC '05 and JACM '08; Rozenman and Vadhan, RANDOM '05). 
ArXiv2017.pdf FOCS2017.pdf

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