Time-Space Tradeoffs for Learning from Small Test Spaces: Learning Low Degree Polynomial Functions

Abstract

We develop an extension of recently developed methods for obtaining time-space tradeoff lower bounds for problems of learning from random test samples to handle the situation where the space of tests is signficantly smaller than the space of inputs, a class of learning problems that is not handled by prior work. This extension is based on a measure of how matrices amplify the 2-norms of probability distributions that is more refined than the 2-norms of these matrices. As applications that follow from our new technique, we show that any algorithm that learns m-variate homogeneous polynomial functions of degree at most d over F2 from evaluations on randomly chosen inputs either requires space (mn) or 2(m) time where n=m(d) is the dimension of the space of such functions. These bounds are asymptotically optimal since they match the tradeoffs achieved by natural learning algorithms for the problems.

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