The Hardest Explicit Construction

Abstract

We investigate the complexity of explicit construction problems, where the goal is to produce a particular object of size n possessing some pseudorandom property in time polynomial in n. We give overwhelming evidence that APEPP, defined originally by Kleinberg et al., is the natural complexity class associated with explicit constructions of objects whose existence follows from the probabilistic method, by placing a variety of such construction problems in this class. We then demonstrate that a result of Jer\'abek on provability in Bounded Arithmetic, when reinterpreted as a reduction between search problems, shows that constructing a truth table of high circuit complexity is complete for APEPP under PNP reductions. This illustrates that Shannon's classical proof of the existence of hard boolean functions is in fact a universal probabilistic existence argument: derandomizing his proof implies a generic derandomization of the probabilistic method. As a corollary, we prove that EXPNP contains a language of circuit complexity 2n(1) if and only if it contains a language of circuit complexity 2n2n. Finally, for several of the problems shown to lie in APEPP, we demonstrate direct polynomial time reductions to the explicit construction of hard truth tables.

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