Computations with polynomial evaluation oracle: ruling out superlinear SETH-based lower bounds
Tatiana Belova, Alexander S. Kulikov, Ivan Mihajlin, Olga Ratseeva,, Grigory Reznikov, Denil Sharipov

TL;DR
This paper explores the limitations of proving superlinear SETH-based lower bounds for problems like k-SUM and triangle detection, showing such proofs imply new circuit lower bounds, by analyzing polynomial evaluation oracles.
Contribution
It introduces a strengthened SETH variant involving polynomial evaluation oracles and demonstrates its implications for circuit lower bounds, challenging the feasibility of superlinear lower bounds under SETH.
Findings
Problems like k-SUM can be solved in nearly linear time with polynomial evaluation oracles.
A strengthened SETH variant implies circuit lower bounds if proven false.
Refuting the strengthened SETH is as challenging as proving superlinear lower bounds.
Abstract
The field of fine-grained complexity aims at proving conditional lower bounds on the time complexity of computational problems. One of the most popular assumptions, Strong Exponential Time Hypothesis (SETH), implies that SAT cannot be solved in time. In recent years, it has been proved that known algorithms for many problems are optimal under SETH. Despite the wide applicability of SETH, for many problems, there are no known SETH-based lower bounds, so the quest for new reductions continues. Two barriers for proving SETH-based lower bounds are known. Carmosino et al. (ITCS 2016) introduced the Nondeterministic Strong Exponential Time Hypothesis (NSETH) stating that TAUT cannot be solved in time even if one allows nondeterminism. They used this hypothesis to show that some natural fine-grained reductions would be difficult to obtain: proving…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplexity and Algorithms in Graphs · Advanced Graph Theory Research · Formal Methods in Verification
