Minimum Guesswork with an Unreliable Oracle

November 20, 2018 ยท The Ethereal ยท ๐Ÿ› International Symposium on Information Theory

๐Ÿ”ฎ THE ETHEREAL: The Ethereal
Pure theory โ€” exists on a plane beyond code

"No code URL or promise found in abstract"

Evidence collected by the PWNC Scanner

Authors Natan Ardimanov, Ofer Shayevitz, Itzhak Tamo arXiv ID 1811.08528 Category cs.DM: Discrete Mathematics Cross-listed cs.IT, math.CO Citations 4 Venue International Symposium on Information Theory Last Checked 2 months ago
Abstract
We study a guessing game where Alice holds a discrete random variable $X$, and Bob tries to sequentially guess its value. Before the game begins, Bob can obtain side-information about $X$ by asking an oracle, Carole, any binary question of his choosing. Carole's answer is however unreliable, and is incorrect with probability $ฮต$. We show that Bob should always ask Carole whether the index of $X$ is odd or even with respect to a descending order of probabilities -- this question simultaneously minimizes all the guessing moments for any value of $ฮต$. In particular, this result settles a conjecture of Burin and Shayevitz. We further consider a more general setup where Bob can ask a multiple-choice $M$-ary question, and then observe Carole's answer through a noisy channel. When the channel is completely symmetric, i.e., when Carole decides whether to lie regardless of Bob's question and has no preference when she lies, a similar question about the ordered index of $X$ (modulo $M$) is optimal. Interestingly however, the problem of testing whether a given question is optimal appears to be generally difficult in other symmetric channels. We provide supporting evidence for this difficulty, by showing that a core property required in our proofs becomes NP-hard to test in the general $M$-ary case. We establish this hardness result via a reduction from the problem of testing whether a system of modular difference disequations has a solution, which we prove to be NP-hard for $M\geq 3$.
Community shame:
Not yet rated
Community Contributions

Found the code? Know the venue? Think something is wrong? Let us know!

๐Ÿ“œ Similar Papers

In the same crypt โ€” Discrete Mathematics