Two-Party Function Computation on the Reconciled Data
Abstract
In this paper, we initiate a study of a new problem termed function computation on the reconciled data, which generalizes a set reconciliation problem in the literature. Assume a distributed data storage system with two users A and B. The users possess a collection of binary vectors SA and SB, respectively. They are interested in computing a function φ of the reconciled data SA SB. It is shown that any deterministic protocol, which computes a sum and a product of reconciled sets of binary vectors represented as nonnegative integers, has to communicate at least 2n + n - 1 and 2n + n - 2 bits in the worst-case scenario, respectively, where n is the length of the binary vectors. Connections to other problems in computer science, such as set disjointness and finding the intersection, are established, yielding a variety of additional upper and lower bounds on the communication complexity. A protocol for computation of a sum function, which is based on use of a family of hash functions, is presented, and its characteristics are analyzed.
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