The layer complexity of Arthur-Merlin-like communication

Abstract

In communication complexity the Arthur-Merlin (AM) model is the most natural one that allows both randomness and non-determinism. Presently we do not have any super-logarithmic lower bound for the AM-complexity of an explicit function. Obtaining such a bound is a fundamental challenge to our understanding of communication phenomena. In this article we explore the gap between the known techniques and the complexity class AM. In the first part we define a new natural class, Small-advantage Layered Arthur-Merlin (SLAM), that has the following properties: - SLAM is (strictly) included in AM and includes all previously known subclasses of AM with non-trivial lower bounds. - SLAM is qualitatively stronger than the union of those classes. - SLAM is a subject to the discrepancy bound: in particular, the inner product function does not have an efficient SLAM-protocol. Structurally this can be summarised as SBP UAM ⊂ SLAM ⊂eq AM PP. In the second part we ask why proving a lower bound of ω( n) on the MA-complexity of an explicit function seems to be difficult. Both of these results are related to the notion of layer complexity, which is, informally, the number of "layers of non-determinism" used by a protocol.

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