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A Refutation of the Gotsman-Linial Conjecture

Speaker(s)
Brynmor Chapman
Affiliation
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Date
July 6, 2017, 12:15 p.m.
Room
room 5870
Seminar
Seminar Algorithms

A degree-$d$ polynomial threshold function is a function that can be written as the sign of a degree-$d$ polynomial on the Boolean hypercube.  Bounds on the sensitivity of polynomial threshold functions to small changes in their inputs have many applications in circuit complexity and learning theory.  In 1991, Craig Gotsman and Nathan Linial conjectured that for all $n$ and $d$, the average sensitivity (sensitivity to a change in one random input bit) of a degree-$d$ polynomial threshold function on $n$ variables is maximized by the degree-$d$ symmetric polynomial which computes the parity function on the $d$ layers of the hypercube with Hamming weight closest to $n/2$.  We refute the conjecture for almost all $d$ and for almost all $n$, and we confirm the conjecture in many of the remaining cases.