Exploring the Frontiers of Feasible Computation

  • Brent, Richard (PI)

    Project: Research

    Project Details

    Description

    The project aims to delineate the boundary between feasible and infeasible computational problems. A problem is considered feasible if there is an algorithm to solve it in worst-case time bounded by a polynomial in the input size. This is probably impossible for the important class of NP-complete problems. However, typical examples of NP-complete problems can often be solved in polynomial time, because worst-case problems are rare. The project is relevant to public-key cryptography, where breaking an encryption scheme should be infeasible, and to many real-life situations where NP-complete problems need to be solved, either exactly or approximately.
    StatusFinished
    Effective start/end date14/03/0513/03/10

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