Shared vs Private Randomness in Distributed Interactive Proofs
Pedro Montealegre, Diego Ram\'irez-Romero, Ivan Rapaport

TL;DR
This paper investigates how shared versus private randomness affects the power of distributed interactive proofs, revealing that their impact varies depending on whether the protocol is Arthur-Merlin or Merlin-Arthur type.
Contribution
It demonstrates the differing effects of shared and private randomness on the computational power of two types of distributed interactive proof protocols.
Findings
Private randomness enhances Arthur-Merlin protocols.
Shared randomness increases power in Merlin-Arthur protocols.
New lower bounds connect shared randomness with distributed verification.
Abstract
In distributed interactive proofs, the nodes of a graph G interact with a powerful but untrustable prover who tries to convince them, in a small number of rounds and through short messages, that G satisfies some property. This series of interactions is followed by a phase of distributed verification, which may be either deterministic or randomized, where nodes exchange messages with their neighbors. The nature of this last verification round defines the two types of interactive protocols. We say that the protocol is of Arthur-Merlin type if the verification round is deterministic. We say that the protocol is of Merlin-Arthur type if, in the verification round, the nodes are allowed to use a fresh set of random bits. In the original model introduced by Kol, Oshman, and Saxena [PODC 2018], the randomness was private in the sense that each node had only access to an individual source…
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