Categories
  • Computational complexity theory
  •   Encyclosphere.org ENCYCLOREADER
      supported by EncyclosphereKSF

    Log-space reduction

    From Handwiki - Reading time: 2 min

    In computational complexity theory, a log-space reduction is a reduction computable by a deterministic Turing machine using logarithmic space. Conceptually, this means it can keep a constant number of pointers into the input, along with a logarithmic number of fixed-size integers.[1] It is possible that such a machine may not have space to write down its own output, so the only requirement is that any given bit of the output be computable in log-space. Formally, this reduction is executed via a log-space transducer.

    Such a machine has polynomially-many configurations, so log-space reductions are also polynomial-time reductions. However, log-space reductions are probably weaker than polynomial-time reductions; while any non-empty, non-full language in P is polynomial-time reducible to any other non-empty, non-full language in P, a log-space reduction between a language in NL and a language in L, both subsets of P, would imply the unlikely L = NL. It is an open question if the NP-complete problems are different with respect to log-space and polynomial-time reductions.

    Log-space reductions are normally used on languages in P, in which case it usually does not matter whether many-one reductions or Turing reductions are used, since it has been verified that L, SL, NL, and P are all closed under Turing reductions[citation needed], meaning that Turing reductions can be used to show a problem is in any of these classes. However, other subclasses of P such as NC may not be closed under Turing reductions, and so many-one reductions must be used[citation needed].

    Just as polynomial-time reductions are useless within P and its subclasses, log-space reductions are useless to distinguish problems in L and its subclasses; in particular, every non-empty, non-full problem in L is trivially L-complete under log-space reductions. While even weaker reductions exist, they are not often used in practice, because complexity classes smaller than L (that is, strictly contained or thought to be strictly contained in L) receive relatively little attention.

    The tools available to designers of log-space reductions have been greatly expanded by the result that L = SL; see SL for a list of some SL-complete problems that can now be used as subroutines in log-space reductions.

    Notes

    1. Arora & Barak (2009) p. 88

    References

    • Arora, Sanjeev; Barak, Boaz (2009). Computational complexity. A modern approach. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-42426-4. 

    Further reading

    • Papadimitriou, Christos (1994). "Chapter 8: Reductions And Completeness". Computational Complexity (1st ed.). Addison Wesley. pp. 159–180. ISBN 0-201-53082-1. 





    This article is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
    Original source: https://handwiki.org/wiki/Log-space reduction
    Status: article is cached
    Encyclosphere.org EncycloReader is supported by the EncyclosphereKSF