Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Gemini 2.5 Flash
Gemini 2.5 Flash
97 tokens/sec
GPT-4o
53 tokens/sec
Gemini 2.5 Pro Pro
43 tokens/sec
o3 Pro
4 tokens/sec
GPT-4.1 Pro
47 tokens/sec
DeepSeek R1 via Azure Pro
28 tokens/sec
2000 character limit reached

Agreement theorems for high dimensional expanders in the small soundness regime: the role of covers (2308.09582v2)

Published 18 Aug 2023 in cs.CC and math.CO

Abstract: Given a family $X$ of subsets of $[n]$ and an ensemble of local functions ${f_s:s\to\Sigma\; | \; s\in X}$, an agreement test is a randomized property tester that is supposed to test whether there is some global function $G:[n]\to\Sigma$ such that $f_s=G|s$ for many sets $s$. A "classical" small-soundness agreement theorem is a list-decoding $(LD)$ statement, saying that [\tag{$LD$} Agree({f_s}) > \varepsilon \quad \Longrightarrow \quad \exists G1,\dots, G\ell,\quad P_s[f_s\overset{0.99}{\approx}Gi|_s]\geq poly(\varepsilon),\;i=1,\dots,\ell. ] Such a statement is motivated by PCP questions and has been shown in the case where $X=\binom{[n]}k$, or where $X$ is a collection of low dimensional subspaces of a vector space. In this work we study small the case of on high dimensional expanders $X$. It has been an open challenge to analyze their small soundness behavior. Surprisingly, the small soundness behavior turns out to be governed by the topological covers of $X$.We show that: 1. If $X$ has no connected covers, then $(LD)$ holds, provided that $X$ satisfies an additional expansion property. 2. If $X$ has a connected cover, then $(LD)$ necessarily fails. 3. If $X$ has a connected cover (and assuming the additional expansion property), we replace the $(LD)$ by a weaker statement we call lift-decoding: [ \tag{$LFD$} Agree({f_s})> \varepsilon \Longrightarrow \quad \exists\text{ cover }\rho:Y\twoheadrightarrow X,\text{ and }G:Y(0)\to\Sigma,\text{ such that }] [P{{\tilde s\twoheadrightarrow s}}[f_s \overset{0.99}{\approx} G|_{\tilde s}] \geq poly(\varepsilon),] where ${\tilde s\twoheadrightarrow s}$ means that $\rho(\tilde s)=s$. The additional expansion property is cosystolic expansion of a complex derived from $X$ holds for the spherical building and for quotients of the Bruhat-Tits building.

User Edit Pencil Streamline Icon: https://streamlinehq.com
Authors (2)
  1. Yotam Dikstein (14 papers)
  2. Irit Dinur (30 papers)
Citations (8)

Summary

We haven't generated a summary for this paper yet.