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Lower Bounds on the State Complexity of Population Protocols

Abstract

Population protocols are a model of computation in which an arbitrary number of indistinguishable finite-state agents interact in pairs. The goal of the agents is to decide by stable consensus whether their initial global configuration satisfies a given property, specified as a predicate on the set of configurations. The state complexity of a predicate is the number of states of a smallest protocol that computes it. Previous work by Blondin \textit{et al.} has shown that the counting predicates xηx \geq \eta have state complexity O(logη)\mathcal{O}(\log \eta) for leaderless protocols and O(loglogη)\mathcal{O}(\log \log \eta) for protocols with leaders. We obtain the first non-trivial lower bounds: the state complexity of xηx \geq \eta is Ω(loglogη)\Omega(\log\log \eta) for leaderless protocols, and the inverse of a non-elementary function for protocols with leaders.

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