A Characterization of hard-to-cover CSPs
Abstract
We continue the study of the covering complexity of constraint satisfaction problems (CSPs) initiated by Guruswami, Hstad and Sudan [SIAM J. Comp. 2002] and Dinur and Kol [CCC'13]. The covering number of a CSP instance is the smallest number of assignments to the variables of , such that each constraint of is satisfied by at least one of the assignments. We show the following results: 1. Assuming a covering variant of the Unique Games Conjecture, introduced by Dinur and Kol, we show that for every non-odd predicate P over any constant-size alphabet and every integer K, it is NP-hard to approximate the covering number within a factor of K. This yields a complete characterization of CSPs over constant-size alphabets that are hard to cover. 2. For a large class of predicates that are contained in the 2k-LIN predicate, we show that it is quasi-NP-hard to distinguish between instances with covering number at most 2 and those with covering number at least ( n). This generalizes and improves the 4-LIN covering hardness result of Dinur and Kol.
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