Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Locally Decodable Codes Uri Nadav Contents • What is Locally Decodable Code (LDC) ? • Constructions • Lower Bounds • Reduction from Private Information Retrieval (PIR) to LDC Minimum Distance For every x≠y that satisfy d(C(x),C(y)) ≥ δ • Error correction problem is solvable for less than δ/2 errors • Error Detection problem is solvable for less than δ errors /2 codeword Error-correction Codeword x Encoding C(x) Input Errors Corrupted codeword i Bit to decode Worst case error assumption y Decoding x[i] Decoded bit Query Complexity • Number of indices decoder is allowed to read from (corrupted) codeword • Decoding can be done with query complexity Ω(|C(x)|) • We are interested in constant query complexity Adversarial Model We can view the errors model as an adversary that chooses positions to destroy, and has access to the decoding/encoding scheme (but not to random coins) The adversary is allowed to insert at most m errors Why not decode in blocks? Adversary is worst case so it can destroy more than δ fraction of some blocks, and less from others. Nice errors: Worst Case: Many errors in the same block Ideal Code C:{0,1} n m Constant information rate: n/m > c Resilient against constant fraction of errors (linear minimum distance) Efficient Decoding (constant query complexity) No Such Code! Definition of LDC C:{0,1} is a (q,,) locally decodable code if there exists a prob. algorithm A such that: n m x {0,1} , y with distance d(y,C(x))<m and n m i {1,..,n}, Pr[ A(y,i)=xi ] > ½ + The Probability is over the coin tosses of A A reads at most q indices of y (of its choice) A has oracle access to y Queries are not allowed to be adaptive A must be probabilistic if q< m Example: Hadamard Code • Hadamard is (2,δ, ½ -2δ) LDC • Construction: Relative minimum distance ½ Encoding x1 x2 xn source word <x,2n-1> <x,1> <x,2> codeword Example: Hadamard Code n Reconstruction Pick aR{0,1} the i’th entry ei=(0,…0,1,0,…,0) reconstruction formula 2 queries xi = Decoding x1 x2 xn source word <x,a> + <x,a+ei> <x,2n-1> <x,1> <x,2> codeword If less than δ fraction of errors, then reconstruction probability is at least 1-2δ Another Construction… Reconstruction of bit xi,j: 2 n´ 2 1) A,B 2) A{i},B 3) A,B{j} 4) A{i},B{j} n´ n matrix n matrix x { AÍ 1,..., n Å Probability of 1-4 for correct decoding { B Í 1,..., n i Î A, j Î B } xi , j } Generalization… n1/ k 2 n1/ k ´ L´ 2 n1/ k ´ L ´ n1/ k CUBE x 2k queries 1/k kn m=2 Smoothly Decodable Code C:{0,1} is a (q,c,) smoothly decodable code if there exists a prob. algorithm A such that: n 1 m x {0,1} and i {1,..,n}, Pr[ A(C(x),i)=xi ] > ½ + n The Probability A has access is to over a non thecorrupted coin tosses codeword of A 2 A reads at most q indices of C(x) (of its choice) Queries are not allowed to be adaptive 3 i {1,..,n} and j {1,..,m}, Pr[ A(·,i) reads j ] ≤ c/m The event is: A reads index j of C(x) to reconstruct index i LDC is also Smooth Code Claim: Every (q,δ,ε) LDC is a (q,q/δ,ε) smooth code. Intuition – If the code is resilient against linear number of errors, then no bit of the output can be queried too often (or else adversary will choose it) Proof: LDC is Smooth A - a reconstruction algorithm for (q,δ,ε) LDC Si= {j | Pr[A query j] > q/δm} Set of indices read ‘too’ often There are at mostq queries, so sum of prob. over j is q , thus |Si| < δm Proof:LDC is Smooth A’ – uses A as black box, returns whatever A returns as xi A’ gives A oracle access to corrupted codeword C(x)’, return only indices not in S [C(x)’]j = 0 j Si C(x)j otherwise A reconstructs xi with probability at least 1/2 + ε, because there are at most |Si| < δm errors A’ is a (q,q/δ, ε) Smooth decoding algorithm Proof: LDC is Smooth indices that A reads too often C(x) what A wants A what A gets C(x)’ 0 0 0 indices that A’ fixed arbitrarily Smooth Code is LDC • A bit can be reconstructed using q uniformly distributed queries, with ε advantage , when no errors • With probability (1-qδ) all the queries are to non-corrupted indices. Remember: Adversary does not know decoding procedure’s random coins Lower Bounds • Non existence for q = 1 [KT] • Non linear rate for q ≥ 2 [KT] • Exponential rate for linear code, q=2 [Goldreich et al] • Exponential rate for every code, q=2 [Kerenidis,de Wolf] (using quantum arguments) Information Theory basics • Entropy H(x) = -∑Pr[x=i] log(Pr[x=i]) • Mutual Information I(x,y) = H(x)-H(x|y) Information Theory cont… • Entropy of multiple variable is less than the sum of entropies! (equal in case of all variables mutually independent: H(x1x2…xn) ≤ ∑ H(xi) • Highest entropy is of a uniformly distributed random variable. IT result from [KT] Thm : Let C : {0,1}n → R be a function. Assume there exists algorithm A s.t. ∀i ∈[n] , Prx [A(C(x),i) = xi ] > 1/2 + ε (prob' taken over all random coins of A, and all x) then log(| R |) ≥ (1 - H (1 / 2 + ε ))n Proof • I(x, C(x)) ≤ H(C(x)) ≤ log(| R |) • I(x, C(x)) = H(x) - H(x | C(x)) n ≥ H(x) - ∑ H(xi | C ( x )) i=1 ≥ (1 - H(1 / 2 + ε))n Combined … log(| R |) ≥ (1- H (1/ 2 + ε))n Single query (q=1) Claim: If C:{0,1} is (1,δ,ε) locally decodable then: n m, log | Σ | n≤ δ(1 - H(1/2 + ε)) No such family of codes! Good Index Index j is said to be ‘good’ for i, if Pr[A(C(x),i)=xi |A reads j] > ½ + ε Single query (q=1) 1/2 + ε < Prx [A(C(x),i) = xi ] = By definition of LDC ∑Pr [A(C(x),i) = x | A(•, i) reads j]Pr[A(•, i) reads j] j∈{1.. m} x i Conditional prob. summing over disjoint events There exist at least a single j1 which is good for i. Perturbation Vector Def: Perturbation vector Δj1,j2,… takes random values uniformly distributed from ∑, in position j1,j2,… and 0 otherwise. Destroys specified indices in most unpredicted way 0 0 j1» j2 » ∑ 0 0 ∑ 0 Adding perturbation 1/2 + ε < Prx [A(C(x)⊕Δj1 , i) = xi ] = A resilient Against at least 1 error ∑Pr [A(C(x)⊕Δ , i) = x | A(•, i) reads j]Pr[A(•, i) reads j] j∈{1.. m} x j1 i So, there exists at least one index, j2 ‘good’ for i. j2 ≠ j1 , because j1 can not be good! Single query (q=1) ∑Pr [A(C(x)⊕Δ j∈[m] x j1 , j2 ,.. jδm > 1/2 + ε , i) = xi | A(•, i) reads j]Pr[A(•, i) reads j] A resilientAgainst δm errors So, There are at least δm indices of The codeword ‘good’ for every i. By pigeonhole principle , there exists an index j’ in {1..m}, ‘good’ for δn indices. Single query (q=1) Think of C(x[1..δn]) projected on j’ as a function from the δn indices of the input. The range is ∑, and each bit of the input can be reconstructed w.p. ½ + ε. Thus by IT result: log(| Σ |) δn < (1 - H(1/2 + ε)) Case q≥2 m = Ω(n)q/(q-1) Constant time reconstruction procedures are impossible for codes having constant rate! Case q≥2 Proof Sketch • A LDC C is also smooth • A q smooth codeword has a small enough subset of indices, that still encodes linear amount of information • So, by IT result, m(q-1)/q = Ω(n) Applications? • Better locally decodable codes have applications to PIR • Applications to the practice of faulttolerant data storage/transmission? What about Locally Encodable • A ‘Respectable Code’ is resilient against Ω(m) fraction of errors. • We expect a bit of the encoding to depend on many bits of the encoding Otherwise, there exists a bit which influence less than 1/n fraction of the encoding. Open Issues • Adaptive vs Non-Adaptive Queries guess first q-1 answers with succeess probability ∑q-1 • Closing the gap Logarithmic number of queries • View message as polynomial p:Fk->F of degree d (F is a field, |F| >> d) • Encode message by evaluating p at all |F|k points • To encode n-bits message, can have |F| polynomial in n, and d,k around polylog(n) To reconstruct p(x) • Pick a random line in Fk passing through x; • evaluate p on d+1 points of the line; • by interpolation, find degree-d univariate polynomial that agrees with p on the line • Use interpolated polynomial to estimate p(x) • Algorithm reads p in d+1 points, each uniformly distributed x+(d+1)y x x+y x+2y Private Information Retrieval (PIR) • Query a public database, without revealing the queried record. • Example: A broker needs to query NASDAQ database about a stock, but don’t won’t anyone to know he is interested. PIR A k server PIR scheme of one round, for database length n consists of: l K query functions Q1 ,..., Qk : [n] × {0,1}lrnd → {0,1} q lq K answer functions A1 ,..., Ak : [n] × {0,1} → {0,1}la reconstruc tion function : R : [n] × {0,1}lrnd × ( {0,1}la )k PIR – definition • These function should satisfy: Correctnes s : ∀x ∈{0,1} n , i ∈[n ], r ∈{0,1} rnd R(i, r, ..., Aj (Qj (i, r)),...) = xi Privacy : For every i, j ∈[n] , s ∈[k] and q ∈{0,1} q , Pr [Qs (i, r) = q] = Pr[Qs (j, r) = q]. Simple Construction of PIR • 2 servers, one round • Each server holds bits x1,…, xn. • To request bit i, choose uniformly A subset of [n] • Send first server A. • Send second server A+{i} (add i to A if it is not there, remove if is there) • Server returns Xor of bits in indices of request S in [n]. • Xor the answers. Lower Bounds On Communication Complexity • To achieve privacy in case of single server, we need n bits message. • (not too far from the one round 2 server scheme we suggested). Reduction from PIR to LDC • A codeword is a Concatenation of all possible answers from both servers • A query procedure is made of 2 queries to the database