Quantum algorithms and approximating polynomials for composed functions with shared inputs (1809.02254v3)
Abstract: We give new quantum algorithms for evaluating composed functions whose inputs may be shared between bottom-level gates. Let $f$ be an $m$-bit Boolean function and consider an $n$-bit function $F$ obtained by applying $f$ to conjunctions of possibly overlapping subsets of $n$ variables. If $f$ has quantum query complexity $Q(f)$, we give an algorithm for evaluating $F$ using $\tilde{O}(\sqrt{Q(f) \cdot n})$ quantum queries. This improves on the bound of $O(Q(f) \cdot \sqrt{n})$ that follows by treating each conjunction independently, and our bound is tight for worst-case choices of $f$. Using completely different techniques, we prove a similar tight composition theorem for the approximate degree of $f$. By recursively applying our composition theorems, we obtain a nearly optimal $\tilde{O}(n{1-2{-d}})$ upper bound on the quantum query complexity and approximate degree of linear-size depth-$d$ AC$0$ circuits. As a consequence, such circuits can be PAC learned in subexponential time, even in the challenging agnostic setting. Prior to our work, a subexponential-time algorithm was not known even for linear-size depth-3 AC$0$ circuits. As an additional consequence, we show that AC$0 \circ \oplus$ circuits of depth $d+1$ require size $\tilde{\Omega}(n{1/(1- 2{-d})}) \geq \omega(n{1+ 2{-d}} )$ to compute the Inner Product function even on average. The previous best size lower bound was $\Omega(n{1+4{-(d+1)}})$ and only held in the worst case (Cheraghchi et al., JCSS 2018).