Tuesday, January 21 |
07:00 - 09:00 |
Breakfast (Vistas Dining Room) |
09:00 - 09:50 |
Pavel Pudlak: On Depth 1 Frege Systems ↓ Combinatorial characterizations of canonical and interpolation pairs have been found for Frege system for every constant depth. The most interesting case is the canonical pair of Resolution which is equivalent to the interpolation pair of depth 1 Frege system. The first (formulation) is connected with weak automatibility of Resolution, the second with interpolation for the weakest fragment of Frege systems for which we do not have feasible interpolation. We will show several ways how these pairs can be presented and connections with monotone interpolation. (TCPL 201) |
09:55 - 10:45 |
Iddo Tzameret: and Edward Hirsch: Semi-Algebraic Proofs, IPS Lower Bounds and the \tau-Conjecture: Can a Natural Number be Negative? ↓ We introduce the binary value principle which is a simple subset-sum instance expressing that a natural number written in binary cannot be negative, relating it to central problems in proof and algebraic complexity. We prove conditional superpolynomial lower bounds on the Ideal Proof System (IPS) refutation size of this instance, based on a well-known hypothesis by Shub and Smale about the hardness of computing factorials, where IPS is the strong algebraic proof system introduced by Grochow and Pitassi (2018). Conversely, we show that short IPS refutations of this instance bridge the gap between sufficiently strong algebraic and semi-algebraic proof systems. Our results extend to full-fledged IPS the paradigm introduced in Forbes et al. (2016), whereby lower bounds against subsystems of IPS were obtained using restricted algebraic circuit lower bounds, and demonstrate that the binary value principle captures the advantage of semi-algebraic over algebraic reasoning, for sufficiently strong systems. Specifically, we show the following:
*Conditional IPS lower bounds:* The Shub-Smale hypothesis (1995) implies a superpolynomial lower bound on the size of IPS refutations of the binary value principle over the rationals defined as the unsatisfiable linear equation \sum_{i=1}^{n} 2^{i-1}x_i = -1, for boolean x_i's. Further, the related \tau-conjecture (1995) implies a superpolynomial lower bound on the size of IPS refutations of a variant of the binary value principle over the ring of rational functions. No prior conditional lower bounds were known for IPS or for apparently much weaker propositional proof systems such as Frege.
*Algebraic vs. semi-algebraic proofs:* Admitting short refutations of the binary value principle is necessary for any algebraic proof system to fully simulate any known semi-algebraic proof system, and for strong enough algebraic proof systems it is also sufficient. In particular, we introduce a very strong proof system that simulates all known semi-algebraic proof systems (and most other known concrete propositional proof systems), under the name Cone Proof System (CPS), as a semi-algebraic analogue of the ideal proof system: CPS establishes the unsatisfiability of collections of polynomial equalities and inequalities over the reals, by representing sum-of-squares proofs (and extensions) as algebraic circuits. We prove that IPS is polynomially equivalent to CPS iff IPS admits polynomial-size refutations of the binary value principle (for the language of systems of equations that have no 0/1-solutions), over both \mathbb{Z} and \mathbb{Q}.
Joint work with Yaroslav Alekseev and Dima Grigoriev. (TCPL 201) |
10:45 - 11:10 |
Coffee Break (TCPL Foyer) |
11:10 - 11:35 |
Igor Carboni Oliveira: Consistency of Circuit Lower Bounds with Bounded Theories ↓ Proving that there are problems in P^{NP} that require boolean circuits of super-linear size is a major frontier in complexity theory. While such lower bounds are known for larger complexity classes, existing results only show that the corresponding problems are hard on infinitely many input lengths. For instance, proving almost-everywhere circuit lower bounds is open even for problems in MAEXP. Giving the notorious difficulty of proving lower bounds that hold for all large input lengths, we ask the following question:
Can we show that a large set of techniques cannot prove that NP is easy infinitely often?
Motivated by this and related questions about the interaction between mathematical proofs and computations, we investigate circuit complexity from the perspective of logic. Among other results, we prove that for any parameter k > 1 it is consistent with theory T that computational class C \not\subseteq i.o.SIZE(n^k), where (T,C) is one of the pairs:
T=T12 and C=P^{NP}, T=S12 and C=NP, T=PV and C=P.
In other words, these theories cannot establish infinitely often circuit upper bounds for the corresponding problems. This is of interest because the weaker theory PV already formalizes sophisticated arguments, such as a proof of the PCP Theorem (Pich, 2015). These consistency statements are unconditional and improve on earlier theorems of Krajicek and Oliveira (2017) and Bydzovsky and Muller (2018) on the consistency of lower bounds with PV.
https://arxiv.org/abs/1905.12935 (TCPL 201) |
11:35 - 12:00 |
Jan Pich: Why are Proof Complexity Lower Bounds Hard? ↓ We formalize and study the question of whether there are inherent difficulties to showing lower bounds on propositional proof complexity.
We establish the following unconditional result: Propositional proof systems cannot efficiently show that truth tables of random Boolean functions lack polynomial size nonuniform proofs of hardness. Assuming a conjecture of Rudich, propositional proof systems also cannot efficiently show that random k-CNFs of linear density lack polynomial size non-uniform proofs of unsatisfiability. Since the statements in question assert the average-case hardness of standard NP problems (MCSP and 3-SAT respectively) against co-nondeterministic circuits for natural distributions, one interpretation of our result is that propositional proof systems are inherently incapable of efficiently proving strong complexity lower bounds in our formalization. Another interpretation is that an analogue of the Razborov-Rudich ‘natural proofs’ barrier holds in proof complexity: under reasonable hardness assumptions, there are natural distributions on hard tautologies for which it is infeasible to show proof complexity lower bounds for strong enough proof systems.
For the specific case of the Extended Frege (EF) propositional proof system, we show that at least one of the following cases holds: (1) EF has no efficient proofs of superpolynomial circuit lower bound tautologies for any Boolean function or (2) There is an explicit family of tautologies of each length such that under reasonable hardness assumptions, most tautologies are hard but no propositional proof system can efficiently establish hardness for most tautologies in the family. Thus, under reasonable hardness assumptions, either the Circuit Lower Bounds program toward complexity separations cannot be implemented in EF, or there are inherent obstacles to implementing the Cook-Reckhow program for EF. This is a joint work with Rahul Santhanam. (TCPL 201) |
12:00 - 13:00 |
Lunch (Vistas Dining Room) |
15:00 - 15:25 |
Olaf Beyersdorff: Characterising QBF Hardness via Circuit Complexity ↓ This talk will start with an overview of the relatively young field of QBF proof complexity, explaining QBF proof systems (including QBF resolution) and an assessment of which lower bound techniques are available for QBF proof systems. In the main part of the talk, I will explain hardness characterisations for QBF proof systems in terms of circuit complexity, yielding very direct connections between circuit lower bounds and QBF proof system lower bounds. (TCPL 201) |
15:30 - 16:00 |
Coffee Break (TCPL Foyer) |
16:00 - 16:25 |
Aaron Potechin: Sum of Squares Bounds for the Ordering Principle ↓ The ordering principle, which says that if there is an ordering on n elements then one of them must be less than all of the others, is an important example in proof complexity. The ordering principle is important because while it has a short resolution proof, any resolution proof must have width \Omega(n) and any polynomial calculus proof must have degree \Omega(n). Thus, with some adjustments, the ordering principle gives a tight example for the size/width tradeoffs of Ben-Sasson and Wigderson for resolution and the size/degree tradeoffs of Impagliazzo, Pudlak, and Sgall for polynomial calculus (as it requires n^2 variables to express the ordering principle).
A natural question is whether the sum of squares hierarchy also requires degree \Omega(n) to prove the ordering principle or if sum of squares can do better. As it turns out, sum of squares can do better. In this talk, I will describe how the sum of squares hierarchy can prove the ordering principle using degree roughly n^(1/2). Time permitting, I will also describe ideas for a sum of squares lower bound. (TCPL 201) |
16:30 - 16:55 |
Nicola Galesi: Resolution and the binary encodings of combinatorial principles ↓ We compare the complexity of refuting the binary and unary versions of
large classes of combinatorial principles in Resolution and its extension
Res(s) to s-DNFs.
In particular we prove size lower bonds in Res(s) for the binary versions
of the weak pigeonhole principle and the k-clique principle. The talk is
based on a joint work with Stefan Dantchev and Barnaby Martin. (TCPL 201) |
17:00 - 17:25 |
Sasank Mouli: The Surprising Power of Constant Depth Algebraic Proofs ↓ A major open problem in proof complexity is to prove super-polynomial lower bounds for AC^0[p]-Frege proofs. This system is the analog of AC^0[p], the class of bounded depth circuits with prime modular counting gates. Despite strong lower bounds for this class dating back thirty years (Razborov, '86 and Smolensky, '87), there are no significant lower bounds for AC^0[p]-Frege. Significant and extensive *degree* lower bounds have been obtained for a variety of subsystems of AC^0[p]-Frege, including Nullstellensatz (Beame et. al. '94), Polynomial Calculus (Clegg et. al. '96), and SOS (Griegoriev and Vorobjov, '01). However to date there has been no progress on AC^0[p]-Frege lower bounds.
In this paper we study constant-depth extensions of the Polynomial Calculus introduced by Griegoriev and Hirsch, '03. We show that these extensions are much more powerful than was previously known. Our main result is that small depth Polynomial Calculus (over a sufficiently large field) can polynomially simulate all of the well-studied semialgebraic proof systems: Cutting Planes, Sherali-Adams and Sum-of-Squares, and they can also quasi-polynomially simulate AC^0[p]-Frege as well as TC^0-Frege. Thus, proving strong lower bounds for AC^0[p]-Frege would seem to require proving lower bounds for systems as strong as TC^0-Frege. (TCPL 201) |
17:30 - 19:30 |
Dinner (Vistas Dining Room) |