Sciweavers

FOCS
2008
IEEE

A Counterexample to Strong Parallel Repetition

14 years 5 months ago
A Counterexample to Strong Parallel Repetition
The parallel repetition theorem states that for any two-prover game, with value 1 − (for, say, ≤ 1/2), the value of the game repeated in parallel n times is at most (1 − c)Ω(n/s), where s is the answers’ length (of the original game) and c is a universal constant [R95]. Several researchers asked wether this bound could be improved to (1 − )Ω(n/s); this question is usually referred to as the strong parallel repetition problem. We show that the answer for this question is negative. More precisely, we consider the odd cycle game of size m; a two-prover game with value 1 − 1/2m. We show that the value of the odd cycle game repeated in parallel n times is at least 1 − (1/m) · O( √ n). This implies that for large enough n (say, n ≥ Ω(m2)), the value of the odd cycle game repeated in parallel n times is at least (1 − 1/4m2)O(n). Thus:
Ran Raz
Added 29 May 2010
Updated 29 May 2010
Type Conference
Year 2008
Where FOCS
Authors Ran Raz
Comments (0)