Members’ Seminar

Information complexity and applications

Over the past two decades, information theory has reemerged within computational complexity theory as a mathematical tool for obtaining unconditional lower bounds in a number of models, including streaming algorithms, data structures, and communication complexity. Many of these applications can be systematized and extended via the study of information complexity – which treats information revealed or transmitted as the resource to be conserved.In this overview talk we will discuss the two-party information complexity and its properties – and the interactive analogues of classical source coding theorems. We will then discuss applications to exact communication complexity bounds, hardness amplification, and quantum communication complexity.

Date & Time

March 06, 2017 | 2:00pm – 3:00pm

Affiliation

Princeton University; von Neumann Fellow, School of Mathematics

Event Series

Categories