Publication | Closed Access
Information Equals Amortized Communication
56
Citations
18
References
2014
Year
Population ProtocolEngineeringInformation TheoryKolmogorov ComplexityData CommunicationMulti-terminal Information TheoryFormal MethodsCommunication ComplexityComputational ComplexityComputer ScienceInformation ManagementCommunicationDiscrete MathematicsAlgorithmic Information TheoryDirect SumFormal VerificationCommunication ProtocolsCryptography
We show how to efficiently simulate the sending of a single message M to a receiver who has partial information about the message, so that the expected number of bits communicated in the simulation is close to the amount of additional information that the message reveals to the receiver. This is a generalization and strengthening of the Slepian-Wolf theorem, which shows how to carry out such a simulation with low amortized communication in the case that M is a deterministic function of X. A caveat is that our simulation is interactive. As a consequence, we prove that the internal information cost (namely the information revealed to the parties) involved in computing any relation or function using a two party interactive protocol is exactly equal to the amortized communication complexity of computing independent copies of the same relation or function. We also show that the only way to prove a strong direct sum theorem for randomized communication complexity is by solving a particular variant of the pointer jumping problem that we define. This paper implies that a strong direct sum theorem for communication complexity holds if and only if efficient compression of communication protocols is possible. In particular, together with our result, a recent result of Ganor, Kol, and Raz implies that the strongest version of direct sum for randomized communication complexity is false.
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