Abstract

The worst-case complexity of group-theoretic algorithms has been studied for a long time. Generic-case complexity, or complexity on random inputs, was introduced and studied relatively recently. In this paper, we address the average-case complexity (i.e., the expected runtime) of algorithms that solve a well-known problem, the Whitehead problem in a free group, which is: given two elements of a free group, find out whether there is an automorphism that takes one element to the other. First we address a special case of the Whitehead problem, namely deciding if a given element of a free group is part of a free basis. We show that there is an algorithm that, on a cyclically reduced input word, solves this problem and has constant (with respect to the length of the input) average-case complexity. For the general Whitehead problem, we show that the classical Whitehead algorithm has linear average-case complexity if the rank of the free group is 2. We argue that the same should be true in a free group of any rank but point out obstacles to establishing this general result.

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