Affiliation:
1. Hebrew Univ., Jerusalem, Israel
Abstract
The
width
of a Resolution proof is defined to be the maximal number of literals in any clause of the proof. In this paper, we relate proof width to proof length (=size), in both general Resolution, and its tree-like variant. The following consequences of these relations reveal width as a crucial “resource” of Resolution proofs.
In one direction, the relations allow us to give
simple, unified
proofs for almost all known exponential lower bounds on size of resolution proofs, as well as several interesting new ones. They all follow from width lower bounds, and we show how these follow from natural expansion property of clauses of the input tautology.
In the other direction, the width-size relations naturally suggest a simple dynamic programming procedure for automated theorem proving—one which simply searches for small width proofs. This relation guarantees that the runnuing time (and thus the size of the produced proof) is at most quasi-polynomial in the smallest tree-like proof. This algorithm is never much worse than any of the recursive automated provers (such as DLL) used in practice. In contrast, we present a family of tautologies on which it is exponentially faster.
Publisher
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Subject
Artificial Intelligence,Hardware and Architecture,Information Systems,Control and Systems Engineering,Software
Reference20 articles.
1. BEAME P. KARP R. PITASSI T. AND SAKS M. 2000. On the complexity of unsatisfiability proofs for random k-CNF formulas. Submitted. BEAME P. KARP R. PITASSI T. AND SAKS M. 2000. On the complexity of unsatisfiability proofs for random k-CNF formulas. Submitted.
2. Resolution proofs of generalized pigeonhole principles
Cited by
267 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献