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Feasible Proofs and Computations: Partnership and Fusion
Turku, Finland July 13-July 17
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/LICS.2004.131960719th Annual IEEE Symposium on Logic i ...
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Alexander A. Razborov, Institute for Advanced Study, School of Mathematics, Princeton, NJ
A computation or a proof is called feasible if it obeys prescribed bounds on the resources consumed during its execution. It turns out that when restricted to this world of feasibility, proofs and computations become extremely tightly interrelated, sometimes even indistinguishable. Moreover, many of these rich relations, underlying concepts, techniques etc. look very different from their "classical" counterparts, or simply do not have any. This talk is intended as a very informal and popular (highly biased as well) attempt to illustrate these fascinating connections by several related developments in the modern complexity theory.
Citation:
Alexander A. Razborov, "Feasible Proofs and Computations: Partnership and Fusion," lics, pp.134-138, 19th Annual IEEE Symposium on Logic in Computer Science (LICS'04), 2004
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