Publication | Closed Access
Towards a theory of nearly constant time parallel algorithms
145
Citations
25
References
2002
Year
Unknown Venue
Mathematical ProgrammingTheory Of ComputingComputational ScienceEngineeringConstant TimeParallel Complexity TheoryParallel ProcessingComputer ArchitectureNew TechniquesParallel ImplementationComputational ComplexityTime ComplexityParallel ProgrammingComputer ScienceParallel ComputingRandomized AlgorithmParallel AlgorithmsSuperfast Optimal Algorithms
It is demonstrated that randomization is an extremely powerful tool for designing very fast and efficient parallel algorithms. Specifically, a running time of O(lg* n) (nearly-constant), with high probability, is achieved using n/lg* n (optimal speedup) processors for a wide range of fundamental problems. Also given is a constant time algorithm which, using n processors, approximates the sum of n positive numbers to within an error which is smaller than the sum by an order of magnitude. A variety of known and new techniques are used. New techniques, which are of independent interest, include estimation of the size of a set in constant time for several settings, and ways for deriving superfast optimal algorithms from superfast nonoptimal ones.< <ETX xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">></ETX>
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