From Bit-Parallelism to Quantum String Matching for Labelled Graphs

Abstract

Many problems that can be solved in quadratic time have bit-parallel speed-ups with factor w, where w is the computer word size. A classic example is computing the edit distance of two strings of length n, which can be solved in O(n2/w) time. In a reasonable classical model of computation, one can assume w=( n), and obtaining significantly better speed-ups is unlikely in the light of conditional lower bounds obtained for such problems. In this paper, we study the connection of bit-parallelism to quantum computation, aiming to see if a bit-parallel algorithm could be converted to a quantum algorithm with better than logarithmic speed-up. We focus on string matching in labeled graphs, the problem of finding an exact occurrence of a string as the label of a path in a graph. This problem admits a quadratic conditional lower bound under a very restricted class of graphs (Equi et al. ICALP 2019), stating that no algorithm in the classical model of computation can solve the problem in time O(|P||E|1-ε) or O(|P|1-ε|E|). We show that a simple bit-parallel algorithm on such restricted family of graphs (level DAGs) can indeed be converted into a realistic quantum algorithm that attains subquadratic time complexity O(|E||P|).

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