A strong direct product theorem for corruption and the multiparty communication complexity of disjointness

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Abstract

We prove that two-party randomized communication complexity satisfies a strong direct product property, so long as the communication lower bound is proved by a "corruption" or "one-sided discrepancy" method over a rectangular distribution. We use this to prove new n Ω(1) lower bounds for 3-player number-on-the-forehead protocols in which the first player speaks once and then the other two players proceed arbitrarily. Using other techniques, we also establish an Ω(n 1/(k-1)/(k - 1)) lower bound for k-player randomized number-on-the-forehead protocols for the disjointness function in which all messages are broadcast simultaneously. A simple corollary of this is that general randomized number-on-the-forehead protocols require Ω(log n/(k - 1)) bits of communication to compute the disjointness function. © Birkhäuser Verlag, Basel 2007.

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Beame, P., Pitassi, T., Segerlind, N., & Wigderson, A. (2006). A strong direct product theorem for corruption and the multiparty communication complexity of disjointness. In Computational Complexity (Vol. 15, pp. 391–432). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00037-007-0220-2

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