The Communication Complexity of Local Search
Yakov Babichenko, Shahar Dobzinski, Noam Nisan

TL;DR
This paper investigates the communication complexity of finding local maxima in graphs and demonstrates that such problems require polynomial to exponential communication, with implications for game theory and auctions.
Contribution
It establishes polynomial lower bounds for local search communication complexity on various graphs and provides tight bounds for hypercubes, also applying these results to potential games and auctions.
Findings
Finding local maxima in certain graphs requires polynomial communication.
Optimal bound of bits for hypercubes.
Exponential communication complexity for Nash equilibria and combinatorial auctions.
Abstract
We study the following communication variant of local search. There is some fixed, commonly known graph . Alice holds and Bob holds , both are functions that specify a value for each vertex. The goal is to find a local maximum of with respect to , i.e., a vertex for which for every neighbor of . Our main result is that finding a local maximum requires polynomial (in the number of vertices) bits of communication. The result holds for the following families of graphs: three dimensional grids, hypercubes, odd graphs, and degree 4 graphs. Moreover, we provide an \emph{optimal} communication bound of for the hypercube, and for a constant dimensional greed, where is the number of vertices in the graph. We provide applications of our main result in two domains, exact potential games and…
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