Seminario
Interdipartimentale di Algoritmica
Monday, April 3, 2006, 12:00 noon
On the Solution-Space Geometry of Random Constraint Satisfaction Problems
Federico Ricci Tersenghi, Dip. di Fisica, Univ. di Roma "La Sapienza"
DI - Department
of Computer Science
Seminar Room, third floor
Abstract:
For a number
of random constraint satisfaction problems, such as random k-SAT and
random graph/hypergraph coloring, there are very good estimates of the
largest constraint density for which solutions exist. Yet, all known
polynomial-time algorithms for these problems fail to find solutions
even at much lower densities. To understand the origin of this gap we
study how the structure of the space of solutions evolves in such
problems as constraints are added. In particular, we prove that much
before solutions disappear, they organize into an exponential number of
clusters, each of which is relatively small and far apart from all
other clusters. Moreover, inside each cluster most variables are
frozen, i.e. take only one value. The existence of such frozen
variables gives a satisfying intuitive explanation for the failure of
the polynomial-time algorithms analyzed so far. At the same time, our
results establish rigorously one of the two main hypotheses underlying
Survey Propagation, a heuristic introduced by physicists in recent
years that appears to perform extraordinarily well on random constraint satisfaction problems.