Using the No-Search Easy-Hard Technique for Downward Collapse
Edith Hemaspaandra, Lane A. Hemaspaandra, Harald Hempel

TL;DR
This paper proves a new downward translation result between levels of the bounded-query hierarchy and the boolean hierarchy for the case k=2, advancing understanding of hierarchy collapses in computational complexity.
Contribution
It establishes that for k=2, the downward translation of equality holds for all m, filling a gap in hierarchy translation results and showing limitations of relativizable techniques.
Findings
Proved that for k=2, the downward translation holds for all m.
Showed that the result cannot be extended to k=1 using relativizable methods.
Tightened the implications of hierarchy collapses in the polynomial hierarchy.
Abstract
The top part of the preceding figure [figure appears in actual paper] shows some classes from the (truth-table) bounded-query and boolean hierarchies. It is well-known that if either of these hierarchies collapses at a given level, then all higher levels of that hierarchy collapse to that same level. This is a standard ``upward translation of equality'' that has been known for over a decade. The issue of whether these hierarchies can translate equality {\em downwards\/} has proven vastly more challenging. In particular, with regard to the figure above, consider the following claim: This claim, if true, says that equality translates downwards between levels of the bounded-query hierarchy and the boolean hierarchy levels that (before the fact) are immediately…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplexity and Algorithms in Graphs · Data Management and Algorithms · Graph Theory and Algorithms
