A Birthday Repetition Theorem and Complexity of Approximating Dense CSPs
Pasin Manurangsi, Prasad Raghavendra

TL;DR
This paper introduces a birthday repetition theorem for two-prover games, demonstrating exponential decay in value, and applies it to establish tight complexity bounds and approximation algorithms for dense constraint satisfaction problems.
Contribution
The paper proves a new birthday repetition theorem for two-prover games and applies it to derive tight hardness and approximation results for dense CSPs.
Findings
Valuation decreases exponentially with parameters in the birthday repetition.
Established tight trade-offs between running time and approximation ratio for dense CSPs.
Provided approximation algorithms and integrality gaps matching the theoretical bounds.
Abstract
A -birthday repetition of a two-prover game is a game in which the two provers are sent random sets of questions from of sizes and respectively. These two sets are sampled independently uniformly among all sets of questions of those particular sizes. We prove the following birthday repetition theorem: when satisfies some mild conditions, decreases exponentially in where is the total number of questions. Our result positively resolves an open question posted by Aaronson, Impagliazzo and Moshkovitz (CCC 2014). As an application of our birthday repetition theorem, we obtain new fine-grained hardness of approximation results for dense CSPs. Specifically, we establish a tight trade-off between running time and approximation ratio for dense CSPs by…
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