Polynomial formulations as a barrier for reduction-based hardness proofs
Tatiana Belova, Alexander Golovnev, Alexander S. Kulikov, Ivan, Mihajlin, Denil Sharipov

TL;DR
This paper introduces polynomial formulations as a barrier to proving SETH-based hardness results for fundamental problems, linking such proofs to major open circuit lower bounds.
Contribution
It establishes that many problems can be represented by low-degree polynomials, and such representations prevent SETH-hardness proofs unless major circuit lower bounds are also proven.
Findings
Many problems admit succinct low-degree polynomial representations.
SETH-hardness proofs for these problems imply new circuit lower bounds.
The polynomial formulation technique acts as a barrier to certain fine-grained reductions.
Abstract
The Strong Exponential Time Hypothesis (SETH) asserts that for every there exists such that -SAT requires time . The field of fine-grained complexity has leveraged SETH to prove quite tight conditional lower bounds for dozens of problems in various domains and complexity classes, including Edit Distance, Graph Diameter, Hitting Set, Independent Set, and Orthogonal Vectors. Yet, it has been repeatedly asked in the literature whether SETH-hardness results can be proven for other fundamental problems such as Hamiltonian Path, Independent Set, Chromatic Number, MAX--SAT, and Set Cover. In this paper, we show that fine-grained reductions implying even -hardness of these problems from SETH for any , would imply new circuit lower bounds: super-linear lower bounds for Boolean series-parallel circuits or polynomial lower bounds…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGraph Theory and Algorithms · Advanced Graph Theory Research · Complexity and Algorithms in Graphs
