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This paper deals with tractability of multivariate problems. Polynomial tractability means that the solution of a \(d\)-variate problem can be solved to within \(\varepsilon\) with polynomial cost in \(\varepsilon^{-1}\) and \(d\). Unfortunately, many multivariate problems (e.g., all non-trivial unweighted linear tensor product problems) are not polynomially tractable. It is natural to as for the ``smallest'' non-exponential function \(T:[1,\infty)\times[1,\infty)\to [1,\infty)\) for which the unweighted linear tensor product is \(T\)-tractable. I.e. the cost of a multivariate problem is bounded by a multiple of a power of \(T(\varepsilon^{-1},d)\). This paper considers \(T(x,y)=\exp((1+\ln x)(1+\ln y))\), and calls the corresponding \(T\)-tractability the quasi-polynomial tractability. The authors study unweigthed multivariate problems in the worst-case and randomized settings. They show relations between quasi-polynomial tractability in these two settings and for the two classes of algorithms.
Property / review text: This paper deals with tractability of multivariate problems. Polynomial tractability means that the solution of a \(d\)-variate problem can be solved to within \(\varepsilon\) with polynomial cost in \(\varepsilon^{-1}\) and \(d\). Unfortunately, many multivariate problems (e.g., all non-trivial unweighted linear tensor product problems) are not polynomially tractable. It is natural to as for the ``smallest'' non-exponential function \(T:[1,\infty)\times[1,\infty)\to [1,\infty)\) for which the unweighted linear tensor product is \(T\)-tractable. I.e. the cost of a multivariate problem is bounded by a multiple of a power of \(T(\varepsilon^{-1},d)\). This paper considers \(T(x,y)=\exp((1+\ln x)(1+\ln y))\), and calls the corresponding \(T\)-tractability the quasi-polynomial tractability. The authors study unweigthed multivariate problems in the worst-case and randomized settings. They show relations between quasi-polynomial tractability in these two settings and for the two classes of algorithms. / rank
 
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Property / reviewed by
 
Property / reviewed by: Martin Plešinger / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 65F30 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 15A69 / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH DE Number
 
Property / zbMATH DE Number: 5907645 / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
linear tensor product problems
Property / zbMATH Keywords: linear tensor product problems / rank
 
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multivariate approximation
Property / zbMATH Keywords: multivariate approximation / rank
 
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worst-case setting
Property / zbMATH Keywords: worst-case setting / rank
 
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randomized setting
Property / zbMATH Keywords: randomized setting / rank
 
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linear information
Property / zbMATH Keywords: linear information / rank
 
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standard information
Property / zbMATH Keywords: standard information / rank
 
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Revision as of 11:59, 1 July 2023

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Quasi-polynomial tractability
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    Quasi-polynomial tractability (English)
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    14 June 2011
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    This paper deals with tractability of multivariate problems. Polynomial tractability means that the solution of a \(d\)-variate problem can be solved to within \(\varepsilon\) with polynomial cost in \(\varepsilon^{-1}\) and \(d\). Unfortunately, many multivariate problems (e.g., all non-trivial unweighted linear tensor product problems) are not polynomially tractable. It is natural to as for the ``smallest'' non-exponential function \(T:[1,\infty)\times[1,\infty)\to [1,\infty)\) for which the unweighted linear tensor product is \(T\)-tractable. I.e. the cost of a multivariate problem is bounded by a multiple of a power of \(T(\varepsilon^{-1},d)\). This paper considers \(T(x,y)=\exp((1+\ln x)(1+\ln y))\), and calls the corresponding \(T\)-tractability the quasi-polynomial tractability. The authors study unweigthed multivariate problems in the worst-case and randomized settings. They show relations between quasi-polynomial tractability in these two settings and for the two classes of algorithms.
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    linear tensor product problems
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    multivariate approximation
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    worst-case setting
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    randomized setting
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    linear information
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    standard information
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