Inverse-Exponential Correlation Bounds and Extremely Rigid Matrices from a New Derandomized XOR Lemma.

2021 
In this work we prove that there is a function f ∈ E NP such that, for every sufficiently large n and d = √n/logn, fn (f restricted to n-bit inputs) cannot be (1/2 + 2−d)-approximated by F2-polynomials of degree d. We also observe that a minor improvement (e.g., improving d to n1/2+e for any e > 0) over our result would imply E NP cannot be computed by depth-3 AC0-circuits of 2n1/2 + e size, which is a notoriously hard open question in complexity theory. Using the same proof techniques, we are also able to construct extremely rigid matrices over F2 in P NP. More specifically, we show that for every constant e ∈ (0,1), there is a P NP algorithm which on input 1n outputs an n× n F2-matrix Hn satisfying RHn(2log1 − e n) ≥ (1/2 − exp(−log2/3 · e n) ) · n2, for every sufficiently large n. This improves the recent P NP constructions of rigid matrices in [Alman and Chen, FOCS 2019] and [Bhangale et al., FOCS 2020], which only give Ω(n2) rigidity. The key ingredient in the proof of our new results is a new derandomized XOR lemma based on approximate linear sums, which roughly says that given an n-input function f which cannot be 0.99-approximated by certain linear sum of s many functions in F within l1-distance, one can construct a new function Ampf with O(n) input bits, which cannot be (1/2+sΩ(1))-approximated by F-functions. Taking F to be a function collection containing low-degree F2-polynomials or low-rank F2-matrices, our results are then obtained by first using the algorithmic method to construct a function which is weakly hard against linear sums of F in the above sense, and then applying the derandomized XOR lemma to f. We obtain our new derandomized XOR lemma by giving a generalization of the famous hardcore lemma by Impagliazzo. Our generalization in some sense constructs a non-Boolean hardcore of a weakly hard function f with respect to F-functions, from the weak inapproximability of f by any linear sum of F with bounded lp-norm. This generalization recovers the original hardcore lemma by considering the l∞-norm. Surprisingly, when we switch to the l1-norm, we immediately rediscover Levin’s proof of Yao’s XOR Lemma. That is, these first two proofs of Yao’s XOR Lemma can be unified with our new perspective. For proving the correlation bounds, our new derandomized XOR lemma indeed works with the l4/3-norm.
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