Orthogonal Vectors Indexing

October 02, 2017 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› International Symposium on Algorithms and Computation

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Authors Isaac Goldstein, Moshe Lewenstein, Ely Porat arXiv ID 1710.00586 Category cs.DS: Data Structures & Algorithms Citations 3 Venue International Symposium on Algorithms and Computation Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
In the recent years, intensive research work has been dedicated to prove conditional lower bounds in order to reveal the inner structure of the class P. These conditional lower bounds are based on many popular conjectures on well-studied problems. One of the most heavily used conjectures is the celebrated Strong Exponential Time Hypothesis (SETH). It turns out that conditional hardness proved based on SETH goes, in many cases, through an intermediate problem - the Orthogonal Vectors (OV) problem. Almost all research work regarding conditional lower bound was concentrated on time complexity. Very little attention was directed toward space complexity. In a recent work, Goldstein et al.[WADS 2017] set the stage for proving conditional lower bounds regarding space and its interplay with time. In this spirit, it is tempting to investigate the space complexity of a data structure variant of OV which is called \emph{OV indexing}. In this problem $n$ boolean vectors of size $c\log{n}$ are given for preprocessing. As a query, a vector $v$ is given and we are required to verify if there is an input vector that is orthogonal to it or not. This OV indexing problem is interesting in its own, but it also likely to have strong implications on problems known to be conditionally hard, in terms of time complexity, based on OV. Having this in mind, we study OV indexing in this paper from many aspects. We give some space-efficient algorithms for the problem, show a tradeoff between space and query time, describe how to solve its reporting variant, shed light on an interesting connection between this problem and the well-studied SetDisjointness problem and demonstrate how it can be solved more efficiently on random input.
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