Abstract

In 1986, Saks and Wigderson conjectured that the largest separation between deterministic and zero-error randomized query complexity for a total Boolean function is given by the function f on n = 2 k bits defined by a complete binary tree of NAND gates of depth k , which achieves R 0 ( f ) = O ( D ( f ) 0.7537… ). We show that this is false by giving an example of a total Boolean function f on n bits whose deterministic query complexity is Ω( n ) while its zero-error randomized query complexity is Õ(√ n ). We further show that the quantum query complexity of the same function is Õ( n 1/4 ), giving the first example of a total function with a super-quadratic gap between its quantum and deterministic query complexities. We also construct a total Boolean function g on n variables that has zero-error randomized query complexity Ω( n / log ( n )) and bounded-error randomized query complexity R ( g ) = Õ(√ n ). This is the first super-linear separation between these two complexity measures. The exact quantum query complexity of the same function is Q E ( g ) = Õ(√ n ). These functions show that the relations D ( f ) = O ( R 1 ( f ) 2 ) and R 0 ( f ) = Õ( R ( f ) 2 ) are optimal, up to polylogarithmic factors. Further variations of these functions give additional separations between other query complexity measures: a cubic separation between Q and R 0 , a 3/2-power separation between Q E and R , and a 4th-power separation between approximate degree and bounded-error randomized query complexity. All of these examples are variants of a function recently introduced by Göös, Pitassi, and Watson, which they used to separate the unambiguous 1-certificate complexity from deterministic query complexity and to resolve the famous Clique versus Independent Set problem in communication complexity.

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