Corelab Seminar
2015-2016

Dimitris Achlioptas
Algorithmic Barriers from Phase Transitions

Abstract.
Constraint Satisfaction Problems (CSPs) are the common abstraction of real-life problems ranging from air-traffic control to protein folding. Their ubiquity presses forward a fundamental question: why are certain CSP instances exceptionally hard while other, seemingly similar, instances are quite easy? To study this phenomenon we consider probability distributions over CSP instances formed by adding constraints one-by-one, uniformly and independently. We will see that for many random CSPs there exists a broad regime in which exponentially many solutions provably exist, yet all known efficient algorithms fail to find even one solution. To understand the origin of this algorithmic barrier we examine how the solution-space geometry evolves as constraints are added. We prove in a precise mathematical sense that the barrier faced by algorithms corresponds to a phase transition in solution-space geometry: at some point, the set of solutions shatters and goes from resembling a single giant ball to exponentially many clusters of well-separated solutions. We then discuss the algorithmic implications of this phenomenon.

Based on joint work with Amin Coja-Oghlan

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