Hypercontractivity for global functions and sharp thresholds
Abstract
The classical hypercontractive inequality for the noise operator on the discrete cube plays a crucial role in many of the fundamental results in the Analysis of Boolean functions, such as the KKL (Kahn-Kalai-Linial) theorem, Friedgut's junta theorem and the invariance principle of Mossel, O'Donnell and Oleszkiewicz. In these results the cube is equipped with the uniform (1/2-biased) measure, but it is desirable, particularly for applications to the theory of sharp thresholds, to also obtain such results for general p-biased measures. However, simple examples show that when p is small there is no hypercontractive inequality that is strong enough for such applications. In this paper, we establish an effective hypercontractivity inequality for general p that applies to `global functions', i.e. functions that are not significantly affected by a restriction of a small set of coordinates. This class of functions appears naturally, e.g. in Bourgain's sharp threshold theorem, which states that such functions exhibit a sharp threshold. We demonstrate the power of our tool by strengthening Bourgain's theorem, thereby making progress on a conjecture of Kahn and Kalai. An additional application of our hypercontractivity theorem, is a p-biased analog of the seminal invariance principle of Mossel, O'Donnell, and Oleszkiewicz. In a companion paper, we give applications to the solution of two open problems in Extremal Combinatorics.
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