Arrow Research search
Back to FOCS

FOCS 2008

Algorithmic Barriers from Phase Transitions

Conference Paper Regular Papers Algorithms and Complexity ยท Theoretical Computer Science

Abstract

For many random constraint satisfaction problems, by now there exist asymptotically tight estimates of the largest constraint density for which solutions exist. At the same time, for many of these problems, all known polynomial-time algorithms stop finding solutions at much smaller densities. For example, it is well-known that it is easy to color a random graph using twice as many colors as its chromatic number. Indeed, some of the simplest possible coloring algorithms achieve this goal. Given the simplicity of those algorithms, one would expect room for improvement. Yet, to date, no algorithm is known that uses (2 - epsiv)chi colors, in spite of efforts by numerous researchers over the years. In view of the remarkable resilience of this factor of 2 against every algorithm hurled at it, we find it natural to inquire into its origin. We do so by analyzing the evolution of the set of k-colorings of a random graph, viewed as a subset of {1, .. ., k} n, as edges are added. We prove that the factor of 2 corresponds in a precise mathematical sense to a phase transition in the geometry of this set. Roughly speaking, we prove that the set of k-colorings looks like a giant ball for k ges 2chi, but like an error-correcting code for k les (2 - epsiv)chi. We also prove that an analogous phase transition occurs both in random k-SAT and in random hypergraph 2-coloring. And that for each of these three problems, the location of the transition corresponds to the point where all known polynomial-time algorithms fail. To prove our results we develop a general technique that allows us to establish rigorously much of the celebrated 1-step replica-symmetry-breaking hypothesis of statistical physics for random CSPs.

Authors

Keywords

  • Polynomials
  • Upper bound
  • Computer science
  • Phase estimation
  • Resilience
  • Geometry
  • Error correction codes
  • Physics
  • Injuries
  • Moment methods
  • Phase Transition
  • Polynomial-time Algorithm
  • Forward Error Correction
  • Random Graph
  • Statistical Physics
  • Local Transition
  • Constraint Satisfaction Problem
  • Random Variables
  • Model Plant
  • Second Moment
  • Marginal Distribution
  • Average Degree
  • Uniform Density
  • Method Of Moments
  • Transition Dynamics
  • Hamming Distance
  • Solution Representation
  • Entire Matrix
  • Color Categories
  • Belief Propagation
  • Branching Process
  • Proof Sketch
  • Factor Graph
  • Phase Transitions
  • Random Constraint Satisfaction Problems
  • Algorithms

Context

Venue
IEEE Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science
Archive span
1975-2025
Indexed papers
3809
Paper id
88236125724964782