Random Permutations in Computational Complexity (2511.08786v1)
Abstract: Classical results of Bennett and Gill (1981) show that with probability 1, $PA \neq NPA$ relative to a random oracle $A$, and with probability 1, $Pπ\neq NPπ\cap coNPπ$ relative to a random permutation $π$. Whether $PA = NPA \cap coNPA$ holds relative to a random oracle $A$ remains open. While the random oracle separation has been extended to specific individually random oracles--such as Martin-Löf random or resource-bounded random oracles--no analogous result is known for individually random permutations. We introduce a new resource-bounded measure framework for analyzing individually random permutations. We define permutation martingales and permutation betting games that characterize measure-zero sets in the space of permutations, enabling formal definitions of resource-bounded random permutations. Our main result shows that $Pπ\neq NPπ\cap coNPπ$ for every polynomial-time betting-game random permutation $π$. This is the first separation result relative to individually random permutations, rather than an almost-everywhere separation. We also strengthen a quantum separation of Bennett, Bernstein, Brassard, and Vazirani (1997) by showing that $NPπ\cap coNPπ\not\subseteq BQPπ$ for every polynomial-space random permutation $π$. We investigate the relationship between random permutations and random oracles. We prove that random oracles are polynomial-time reducible from random permutations. The converse--whether every random permutation is reducible from a random oracle--remains open. We show that if $NP \cap coNP$ is not a measurable subset of $EXP$, then $PA \neq NPA \cap coNPA$ holds with probability 1 relative to a random oracle $A$. Conversely, establishing this random oracle separation with time-bounded measure would imply $BPP$ is a measure 0 subset of $EXP$.
Sponsored by Paperpile, the PDF & BibTeX manager trusted by top AI labs.
Get 30 days freePaper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.