Some combinatorial-algebraic problems from complexity theory
DOI10.1016/0012-365X(94)00115-YzbMath0824.68053OpenAlexW1992906573WikidataQ127549018 ScholiaQ127549018MaRDI QIDQ1344621
Publication date: 13 February 1995
Published in: Discrete Mathematics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/0012-365x(94)00115-y
Computational methods for sparse matrices (65F50) Analysis of algorithms and problem complexity (68Q25) Combinatorial aspects of matrices (incidence, Hadamard, etc.) (05B20) Graph theory (including graph drawing) in computer science (68R10) Graphs and linear algebra (matrices, eigenvalues, etc.) (05C50) Boolean functions (06E30)
Related Items (11)
Cites Work
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- A note on Ramsey numbers
- A combinatorial approach to complexity
- The gap between the chromatic number of a graph and the rank of its adjacency matrix is superlinear
- Communication in bounded depth circuits
- Applications of matrix methods to the theory of lower bounds in computational complexity
- Maximum Rank of Powers of a Matrix of a Given Pattern
- Linear Circuits over $\operatorname{GF}(2)$
- A counterexample to the rank-coloring conjecture
- Modified ranks of tensors and the size of circuits
- Lower Bounds for Approximation by Nonlinear Manifolds
- Systems of distinct representatives and linear algebra
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