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The meaning of the word 'complete' is not intuitive. ... Problems which are hard or complete on one machine-based family of language X ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CS355%20


1
CS355 The Mathematics and Theory of Computer
Science
  • Reducibility

2
Mapping reducibility
  • Being able to reduce problem A to problem B by
    using a mapping reducibility means that a
    computable function exists that converts
    instances of problem A to problem B.
  • If we have such a conversion function called a
    reduction, we can solve A with a solver for B.
  • The reason is that any instance of A can be
    solved by first using the reduction to convert it
    to an instance of B and then applying the solver
    to B.

3
Computable function
  • A function f S ? S is a computable function if
    some Turing machine M, on every input w, halts
    with just f(w) on its tape.
  • All usual arithmetic operations on integers are
    computable functions.

4
Mapping reducibility
  • Language A is mapping reducible to language B,
    written A m B, if there is a computable function
    f S ? S, where for every w,
  • w A ltgt f(w) B.
  • The function f is called the reduction of A to B.

5
Mapping reducibility
A
B
f
f reducing A to B
6
Mapping reducibility
  • A mapping reduction of A to B provides a way to
    convert questions about membership testing in A
    to membership testing in B.
  • To test whether w A, we use the reduction f to
    map w to f(w) and test whether f(w) B.
  • The term mapping reduction comes from the
    function or mapping that provides the means of
    doing the reduction.

7
Mapping reducibility
  • If one problem is mapping reducible to a second,
    previously solved problem, we can thereby obtain
    a solution to the original problem.
  • Let us look at this.

8
Reducibility
  • If A reduces to B and B is decidable, then A is
    decidable
  • To decide A, convert A to B and decide B.
  • If A reduces to B and B is undecidable, then B is
    undecidable
  • If B is decidable, then by above A is decidable,
    contradiction.

9
Turing-recognisable
  • If A m B and A is not Turing-recognisable then B
    is not Turing-recognisable.

10
Completeness
  • suppose we know that there is a problem A not in
    class X. By finding a reduction from A to B we
    can prove that B is not in X either.

11
Completeness
  • IF A, B are problems, X is a class of problems,
    and R is a class of reductions, then
  • If B R A for every B X, we say that A is hard
    for X under R reductions, or, R-hard for X.

12
Completeness
  • If is also happens that A X, then we say that A
    is complete for X under R reductions or
    R-complete for X.

13
Completeness
  • Rather than looking at a specific class of
    reductions we will just look at m-reductions
    which we can use to get a more concise
    terminology.

14
Completeness
  • If A, B are languages and X is a class of
    languages,
  • If B mp A for every B X, we say that A is
    X-hard (mphard for X).
  • So, if A is X-hard then it is at least as hard as
    every problem in X.

15
Completeness
  • If A X and A is X-hard, then we say that
  • A is X-complete(mp -complete for X).

16
Completeness
  • If X, Y are two classes of problems (or their
    associated languages) such that X Y, then
  • Any language B that is Y-complete does not belong
    to X.

B
Y
X
17
Completeness
  • A is X-complete
  • B is X-hard and Y-complete
  • C is X-hard, Y-hard and Z-complete

B
A
C
Y
X
18
Completeness
  • The meaning of the word complete is not
    intuitive.
  • It comes from Godels and Kleenes recursive
    function theory, and is used to denote that
  • A solution to any problem in the set can be
    applied to all others in the set.

19
Completeness
  • Some points to note
  • If A is X-complete it can be viewed as being
    typical of the hardest problems found in X.
  • Problems which are hard or complete on one
    machine-based family of language X will have the
    same properties on all other machine models.

20
Completeness
  1. Almost all reductions establishing hardness or
    completeness of specific problems not only
    transform solvable instances into solvable
    instances, but also general solutions into
    general solutions.

21
Completeness
  1. Many complete problems have the property that one
    can efficiently compute a solution as soon as one
    can prove that a solution exists.
  2. Solving one PSPACE-complete problem in polynomial
    time implies that all PSPACE problems are in P.
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