Turing reducibility
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In computability theory, a Turing reduction from a
decision problem In computability theory and computational complexity theory, a decision problem is a computational problem that can be posed as a yes–no question of the input values. An example of a decision problem is deciding by means of an algorithm wheth ...
A to a decision problem B is an
oracle machine In complexity theory and computability theory, an oracle machine is an abstract machine used to study decision problems. It can be visualized as a Turing machine with a black box, called an oracle, which is able to solve certain problems in a ...
which decides problem A given an oracle for B (Rogers 1967, Soare 1987). It can be understood as an
algorithm In mathematics and computer science, an algorithm () is a finite sequence of rigorous instructions, typically used to solve a class of specific problems or to perform a computation. Algorithms are used as specifications for performing ...
that could be used to solve A if it had available to it a subroutine for solving ''B''. The concept can be analogously applied to
function problem In computational complexity theory, a function problem is a computational problem where a single output (of a total function) is expected for every input, but the output is more complex than that of a decision problem. For function problems, the o ...
s. If a Turing reduction from A to B exists, then every
algorithm In mathematics and computer science, an algorithm () is a finite sequence of rigorous instructions, typically used to solve a class of specific problems or to perform a computation. Algorithms are used as specifications for performing ...
for B can be used to produce an algorithm for A, by inserting the algorithm for B at each place where the oracle machine computing A queries the oracle for B. However, because the oracle machine may query the oracle a large number of times, the resulting algorithm may require more time asymptotically than either the algorithm for B or the oracle machine computing A. A Turing reduction in which the oracle machine runs in polynomial time is known as a Cook reduction. The first formal definition of relative computability, then called relative reducibility, was given by
Alan Turing Alan Mathison Turing (; 23 June 1912 – 7 June 1954) was an English mathematician, computer scientist, logician, cryptanalyst, philosopher, and theoretical biologist. Turing was highly influential in the development of theoretical co ...
in 1939 in terms of
oracle machine In complexity theory and computability theory, an oracle machine is an abstract machine used to study decision problems. It can be visualized as a Turing machine with a black box, called an oracle, which is able to solve certain problems in a ...
s. Later in 1943 and 1952
Stephen Kleene Stephen Cole Kleene ( ; January 5, 1909 – January 25, 1994) was an American mathematician. One of the students of Alonzo Church, Kleene, along with Rózsa Péter, Alan Turing, Emil Post, and others, is best known as a founder of the branch of ...
defined an equivalent concept in terms of recursive functions. In 1944
Emil Post Emil Leon Post (; February 11, 1897 – April 21, 1954) was an American mathematician and logician. He is best known for his work in the field that eventually became known as computability theory. Life Post was born in Augustów, Suwałki Gove ...
used the term "Turing reducibility" to refer to the concept.


Definition

Given two sets A,B \subseteq \mathbb of natural numbers, we say A is Turing reducible to B and write :A \leq_T B if there is an
oracle machine In complexity theory and computability theory, an oracle machine is an abstract machine used to study decision problems. It can be visualized as a Turing machine with a black box, called an oracle, which is able to solve certain problems in a ...
that computes the
characteristic function In mathematics, the term "characteristic function" can refer to any of several distinct concepts: * The indicator function of a subset, that is the function ::\mathbf_A\colon X \to \, :which for a given subset ''A'' of ''X'', has value 1 at points ...
of ''A'' when run with oracle ''B''. In this case, we also say ''A'' is ''B''-recursive and ''B''-computable. If there is an oracle machine that, when run with oracle ''B'', computes a partial function with domain ''A'', then ''A'' is said to be ''B''-
recursively enumerable In computability theory, a set ''S'' of natural numbers is called computably enumerable (c.e.), recursively enumerable (r.e.), semidecidable, partially decidable, listable, provable or Turing-recognizable if: *There is an algorithm such that the ...
and ''B''-computably enumerable. We say A is Turing equivalent to B and write A \equiv_T B\, if both A \leq_T B and B \leq_T A. The equivalence classes of Turing equivalent sets are called
Turing degree In computer science and mathematical logic the Turing degree (named after Alan Turing) or degree of unsolvability of a set of natural numbers measures the level of algorithmic unsolvability of the set. Overview The concept of Turing degree is fund ...
s. The Turing degree of a set X is written \textbf(X). Given a set \mathcal \subseteq \mathcal(\mathbb), a set A \subseteq \mathbb is called Turing hard for \mathcal if X \leq_T A for all X \in \mathcal. If additionally A \in \mathcal then A is called Turing complete for \mathcal.


Relation of Turing completeness to computational universality

Turing completeness, as just defined above, corresponds only partially to
Turing completeness In computability theory, a system of data-manipulation rules (such as a computer's instruction set, a programming language, or a cellular automaton) is said to be Turing-complete or computationally universal if it can be used to simulate any Tu ...
in the sense of computational universality. Specifically, a Turing machine is a
universal Turing machine In computer science, a universal Turing machine (UTM) is a Turing machine that can simulate an arbitrary Turing machine on arbitrary input. The universal machine essentially achieves this by reading both the description of the machine to be simu ...
if its
halting problem In computability theory, the halting problem is the problem of determining, from a description of an arbitrary computer program and an input, whether the program will finish running, or continue to run forever. Alan Turing proved in 1936 that a ...
(i.e., the set of inputs for which it eventually halts) is many-one complete. Thus, a necessary ''but insufficient'' condition for a machine to be computationally universal, is that the machine's halting problem be Turing-complete for the set \mathcal of recursively enumerable sets. Insufficient because it may still be the case that, the language accepted by the machine is not itself recursively enumerable.


Example

Let W_e denote the set of input values for which the Turing machine with index ''e'' halts. Then the sets A = \ and B = \ are Turing equivalent (here (-,-) denotes an effective pairing function). A reduction showing A \leq_T B can be constructed using the fact that e \in A \Leftrightarrow (e,e) \in B. Given a pair (e,n), a new index i(e,n) can be constructed using the smn theorem such that the program coded by i(e,n) ignores its input and merely simulates the computation of the machine with index ''e'' on input ''n''. In particular, the machine with index i(e,n) either halts on every input or halts on no input. Thus i(e,n) \in A \Leftrightarrow (e,n) \in B holds for all ''e'' and ''n''. Because the function ''i'' is computable, this shows B \leq_T A. The reductions presented here are not only Turing reductions but ''many-one reductions'', discussed below.


Properties

* Every set is Turing equivalent to its complement. * Every
computable set In computability theory, a set of natural numbers is called computable, recursive, or decidable if there is an algorithm which takes a number as input, terminates after a finite amount of time (possibly depending on the given number) and correctly ...
is Turing reducible to every other set. Because any computable set can be computed with no oracle, it can be computed by an oracle machine that ignores the given oracle. * The relation \leq_T is transitive: if A \leq_T B and B \leq_T C then A \leq_T C. Moreover, A \leq_T A holds for every set ''A'', and thus the relation \leq_T is a preorder (it is not a
partial order In mathematics, especially order theory, a partially ordered set (also poset) formalizes and generalizes the intuitive concept of an ordering, sequencing, or arrangement of the elements of a set. A poset consists of a set together with a bina ...
because A \leq_T B and B \leq_T A does not necessarily imply A = B). * There are pairs of sets (A,B) such that ''A'' is not Turing reducible to ''B'' and ''B'' is not Turing reducible to ''A''. Thus \leq_T is not a
total order In mathematics, a total or linear order is a partial order in which any two elements are comparable. That is, a total order is a binary relation \leq on some set X, which satisfies the following for all a, b and c in X: # a \leq a ( reflex ...
. * There are infinite decreasing sequences of sets under \leq_T. Thus this relation is not well-founded. * Every set is Turing reducible to its own
Turing jump In computability theory, the Turing jump or Turing jump operator, named for Alan Turing, is an operation that assigns to each decision problem a successively harder decision problem with the property that is not decidable by an oracle machine w ...
, but the Turing jump of a set is never Turing reducible to the original set.


The use of a reduction

Since every reduction from a set B to a set A has to determine whether a single element is in A in only finitely many steps, it can only make finitely many queries of membership in the set B. When the amount of information about the set B used to compute a single bit of A is discussed, this is made precise by the use function. Formally, the ''use'' of a reduction is the function that sends each natural number n to the largest natural number m whose membership in the set ''B'' was queried by the reduction while determining the membership of n in A.


Stronger reductions

There are two common ways of producing reductions stronger than Turing reducibility. The first way is to limit the number and manner of oracle queries. * Set A is
many-one reducible In computability theory and computational complexity theory, a many-one reduction (also called mapping reduction) is a reduction which converts instances of one decision problem L_1 into instances of a second decision problem L_2 where the instan ...
to B if there is a
total computable function Computable functions are the basic objects of study in computability theory. Computable functions are the formalized analogue of the intuitive notion of algorithms, in the sense that a function is computable if there exists an algorithm that can do ...
f such that an element n is in A if and only if f(n) is in B. Such a function can be used to generate a Turing reduction (by computing f(n), querying the oracle, and then interpreting the result). * A truth table reduction or a weak truth table reduction must present all of its oracle queries at the same time. In a truth table reduction, the reduction also gives a boolean function (a truth table) which, when given the answers to the queries, will produce the final answer of the reduction. In a weak truth table reduction, the reduction uses the oracle answers as a basis for further computation depending on the given answers (but not using the oracle). Equivalently, a weak truth table reduction is one for which the use of the reduction is bounded by a computable function. For this reason, weak truth table reductions are sometimes called "bounded Turing" reductions. The second way to produce a stronger reducibility notion is to limit the computational resources that the program implementing the Turing reduction may use. These limits on the computational complexity of the reduction are important when studying subrecursive classes such as P. A set ''A'' is polynomial-time reducible to a set B if there is a Turing reduction of A to B that runs in polynomial time. The concept of
log-space reduction In computational complexity theory, a log-space reduction is a reduction computable by a deterministic Turing machine using logarithmic space. Conceptually, this means it can keep a constant number of pointers into the input, along with a logari ...
is similar. These reductions are stronger in the sense that they provide a finer distinction into equivalence classes, and satisfy more restrictive requirements than Turing reductions. Consequently, such reductions are harder to find. There may be no way to build a many-one reduction from one set to another even when a Turing reduction for the same sets exists.


Weaker reductions

According to the Church–Turing thesis, a Turing reduction is the most general form of an effectively calculable reduction. Nevertheless, weaker reductions are also considered. Set A is said to be arithmetical in B if A is definable by a formula of Peano arithmetic with B as a parameter. The set A is hyperarithmetical in B if there is a
recursive ordinal In mathematics, specifically computability and set theory, an ordinal \alpha is said to be computable or recursive if there is a computable well-ordering of a subset of the natural numbers having the order type \alpha. It is easy to check that \om ...
\alpha such that A is computable from B^, the α-iterated Turing jump of B. The notion of relative constructibility is an important reducibility notion in set theory.


See also

* Karp reduction


Notes


References

* M. Davis, ed., 1965. ''The Undecidable—Basic Papers on Undecidable Propositions, Unsolvable Problems and Computable Functions'', Raven, New York. Reprint, Dover, 2004. . * S. C. Kleene, 1952. Introduction to Metamathematics. Amsterdam: North-Holland. * S. C. Kleene and E. L. Post, 1954. "The upper semi-lattice of degrees of recursive unsolvability". ''Annals of Mathematics'' v. 2 n. 59, 379–407. * * A. Turing, 1939. "Systems of logic based on ordinals." ''Proceedings of the London Mathematics Society'', ser. 2 v. 45, pp. 161–228. Reprinted in "The Undecidable", M. Davis ed., 1965. * H. Rogers, 1967. Theory of recursive functions and effective computability. McGraw-Hill. * R. Soare, 1987. Recursively enumerable sets and degrees, Springer. *


External links


NIST Dictionary of Algorithms and Data Structures: Turing reductionUniversity of Cambridge, Andrew Pitts, Tobias Kohn: Computation Theory
{{Authority control Reduction (complexity) Alan Turing he:רדוקציה חישובית