A Direct Product Theorem for the Two-Party Bounded-Round Public-Coin Communication Complexity

  • Authors:
  • Rahul Jain;Attila Pereszlenyi;Penghui Yao

  • Affiliations:
  • -;-;-

  • Venue:
  • FOCS '12 Proceedings of the 2012 IEEE 53rd Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science
  • Year:
  • 2012

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Abstract

A strong direct product theorem for a problem in a given model of computation states that, in order to compute k instances of the problem, if we provide resource which is less than k times the resource required for computing one instance of the problem with constant success probability, then the probability of correctly computing all the k instances together, is exponentially small in k. In this paper, we consider the model of two-party bounded-round public-coin randomized communication complexity. We show a direct product theorem for the communication complexity of any relation in this model. In particular, our result implies a strong direct product theorem for the two-party constant-message public-coin randomized communication complexity of all relations. As an immediate application of our result, we get a strong direct product theorem for the pointer chasing problem. This problem has been well studied for understanding round v/s communication trade-offs in both classical and quantum communication protocols. Our result generalizes the result of Jain [2011] which can be regarded as the special case when t=1. Our result can be considered as an important progress towards settling the strong direct product conjecture for the two-party public-coin communication complexity, a major open question in this area. We show our result using information theoretic arguments. Our arguments and techniques build on the ones used in Jain~\cite{Jain:2011}. %, where a strong direct product theorem for the %two-party one-way public-coin communication complexity of all %relations is shown (that is the special case of our result when $t=1$). One key tool used in our work and also in Jain~\cite{Jain:2011} is a message compression technique due to Braver man and Rao~\cite{Braverman2011}, who used it to show a {\em direct sum} theorem in the same model of communication complexity as considered by us. Another important tool that we use is a correlated sampling protocol, which for example, has been used in Holenstein~\cite{Holenstein2007} for proving a parallel repetition theorem for two-prover games.