In computational complexity theory and the analysis of algorithms, an algorithm is said to take quasi-polynomial time if its time complexity is quasi-polynomially bounded. That is, there should exist a constant such that the worst-case running time of the algorithm, on inputs of size , has an upper bound of the form

The decision problems with quasi-polynomial time algorithms are natural candidates for being NP-intermediate, neither having polynomial time nor likely to be NP-hard.

Complexity class

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The complexity class QP consists of all problems that have quasi-polynomial time algorithms. It can be defined in terms of DTIME as follows.[1]

 

Examples

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An early example of a quasi-polynomial time algorithm was the Adleman–Pomerance–Rumely primality test;[2] however, the problem of testing whether a number is a prime number has subsequently been shown to have a polynomial time algorithm, the AKS primality test.[3]

In some cases, quasi-polynomial time bounds can be proven to be optimal under the exponential time hypothesis or a related computational hardness assumption. For instance, this is true for finding the largest disjoint subset of a collection of unit disks in the hyperbolic plane,[4] and for finding a graph with the fewest vertices that does not appear as an induced subgraph of a given graph.[5]

Other problems for which the best known algorithm takes quasi-polynomial time include:

  • The planted clique problem, of determining whether a random graph has been modified by adding edges between all pairs of a subset of its vertices.[6]
  • Monotone dualization, several equivalent problems of converting logical formulas between conjunctive and disjunctive normal form, listing all minimal hitting sets of a family of sets, or listing all minimal set covers of a family of sets, with time complexity measured in the combined input and output size.[7]
  • Parity games, involving token-passing along the edges of a colored directed graph.[8] The paper giving a quasi-polynomial algorithm for these games won the 2021 Nerode Prize.[9]
  • Computing the Vapnik–Chervonenkis dimension of a family of sets.[10]
  • Finding the smallest dominating set in a tournament, a subset of the vertices of the tournament that has at least one directed edge to all other vertices.[11]

Problems for which a quasi-polynomial time algorithm has been announced but not fully published include:

In approximation algorithms

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Quasi-polynomial time has also been used to study approximation algorithms. In particular, a quasi-polynomial-time approximation scheme (QPTAS) is a variant of a polynomial-time approximation scheme whose running time is quasi-polynomial rather than polynomial. Problems with a QPTAS include minimum-weight triangulation,[14] and finding the maximum clique on the intersection graph of disks.[15]

More strongly, the problem of finding an approximate Nash equilibrium has a QPTAS, but cannot have a PTAS under the exponential time hypothesis.[16]

References

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  1. ^ Complexity Zoo: Class QP: Quasipolynomial-Time
  2. ^ Adleman, Leonard M.; Pomerance, Carl; Rumely, Robert S. (1983), "On distinguishing prime numbers from composite numbers", Annals of Mathematics, 117 (1): 173–206, doi:10.2307/2006975, JSTOR 2006975
  3. ^ Agrawal, Manindra; Kayal, Neeraj; Saxena, Nitin (2004), "PRIMES is in P" (PDF), Annals of Mathematics, 160 (2): 781–793, doi:10.4007/annals.2004.160.781, JSTOR 3597229
  4. ^ Kisfaludi-Bak, Sándor (2020), "Hyperbolic intersection graphs and (quasi)-polynomial time", in Chawla, Shuchi (ed.), Proceedings of the 31st Annual ACM–SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms, SODA 2020, Salt Lake City, UT, USA, January 5–8, 2020, pp. 1621–1638, arXiv:1812.03960, doi:10.1137/1.9781611975994.100, ISBN 978-1-61197-599-4
  5. ^ Eppstein, David; Lincoln, Andrea; Williams, Virginia Vassilevska (2023), "Quasipolynomiality of the smallest missing induced subgraph", Journal of Graph Algorithms and Applications, 27 (5): 329–339, arXiv:2306.11185, doi:10.7155/jgaa.00625
  6. ^ Hazan, Elad; Krauthgamer, Robert (2011), "How hard is it to approximate the best Nash equilibrium?", SIAM Journal on Computing, 40 (1): 79–91, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.511.4422, doi:10.1137/090766991, MR 2765712
  7. ^ Eiter, Thomas; Makino, Kazuhisa; Gottlob, Georg (2008), "Computational aspects of monotone dualization: a brief survey", Discrete Applied Mathematics, 156 (11): 2035–2049, doi:10.1016/j.dam.2007.04.017, MR 2437000
  8. ^ Calude, Cristian S.; Jain, Sanjay; Khoussainov, Bakhadyr; Li, Wei; Stephan, Frank (2022), "Deciding parity games in quasi-polynomial time", SIAM Journal on Computing, 51 (2): STOC17-152–STOC17-188, doi:10.1137/17M1145288, hdl:2292/31757, MR 4413072
  9. ^ IPEC Nerode Prize, EATCS, retrieved 2023-12-03
  10. ^ Papadimitriou, Christos H.; Yannakakis, Mihalis (1996), "On limited nondeterminism and the complexity of the V-C dimension", Journal of Computer and System Sciences, 53 (2): 161–170, doi:10.1006/jcss.1996.0058, MR 1418886
  11. ^ Megiddo, Nimrod; Vishkin, Uzi (1988), "On finding a minimum dominating set in a tournament", Theoretical Computer Science, 61 (2–3): 307–316, doi:10.1016/0304-3975(88)90131-4, MR 0980249
  12. ^ Klarreich, Erica (January 14, 2017), "Graph isomorphism vanquished — again", Quanta Magazine
  13. ^ Marc Lackenby announces a new unknot recognition algorithm that runs in quasi-polynomial time, Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford, 2021-02-03, retrieved 2021-02-03
  14. ^ Remy, Jan; Steger, Angelika (2009), "A quasi-polynomial time approximation scheme for minimum weight triangulation", Journal of the ACM, 56 (3), Article A15, doi:10.1145/1516512.1516517
  15. ^ Bonnet, Édouard; Giannopoulos, Panos; Kim, Eun Jung; Rzazewski, Pawel; Sikora, Florian (2018), "QPTAS and subexponential algorithm for maximum clique on disk graphs", in Speckmann, Bettina; Tóth, Csaba D. (eds.), 34th International Symposium on Computational Geometry, SoCG 2018, June 11–14, 2018, Budapest, Hungary, LIPIcs, vol. 99, Schloss Dagstuhl – Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik, pp. 12:1–12:15, doi:10.4230/LIPICS.SOCG.2018.12
  16. ^ Braverman, Mark; Kun-Ko, Young; Weinstein, Omri (2015), "Approximating the best Nash equilibrium in  -time breaks the Exponential Time Hypothesis", in Indyk, Piotr (ed.), Proceedings of the 26th Annual ACM–SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms, SODA 2015, San Diego, CA, USA, January 4–6, 2015, pp. 970–982, doi:10.1137/1.9781611973730.66