An improved protocol for ExactlyN with more than 3 players
Lianna Hambardzumyan, Toniann Pitassi, Suhail Sherif, Morgan Shirley,, Adi Shraibman

TL;DR
This paper presents a new, more efficient protocol for the ExactlyN problem in the number-on-forehead communication setting for more than three players, improving bounds and constructing explicit protocols that advance understanding in communication complexity and combinatorics.
Contribution
It extends the best known bounds for ExactlyN to all k > 3 and provides explicit protocols, bridging the gap between combinatorial and communication complexity approaches.
Findings
Improved protocol for ExactlyN for all k > 3
Larger corner-free sets in higher dimensions
Explicit protocols for any number of players
Abstract
The ExactlyN problem in the number-on-forehead (NOF) communication setting asks players, each of whom can see every input but their own, if the input numbers add up to . Introduced by Chandra, Furst and Lipton in 1983, ExactlyN is important for its role in understanding the strength of randomness in communication complexity with many players. It is also tightly connected to the field of combinatorics: its -party NOF communication complexity is related to the size of the largest corner-free subset in . In 2021, Linial and Shraibman gave more efficient protocols for ExactlyN for 3 players. As an immediate consequence, this also gave a new construction of larger corner-free subsets in . Later that year Green gave a further refinement to their argument. These results represent the first improvements to the highest-order term for since the famous work…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplexity and Algorithms in Graphs · Computability, Logic, AI Algorithms · Cryptography and Data Security
