Joel L. Wolf, Mark S. Squillante, et al.
IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering
A probabilistic algebraic computation tree (probabilistic ACT) which recognizes L ⊂ Rn in expected time T, and which gives the wrong answer with probability ≤ ε{lunate} < 1 2, can be simulated by a deterministic ACT in O(T2n) steps. The same result holds for linear search algorithms (LSAs). The result for ACTs establishes a weaker version of results previously shown by the author for LSAs, namely that LSAs can only be slightly sped up by their nondeterministic versions. This paper shows that ACTs can only be slightly sped up by their probabilistic versions. The result for LSAs solves a problem posed by Snir (1983). He found an example where probabilistic LSAs are faster than deterministic ones and asked how large this gap can be. © 1985.
Joel L. Wolf, Mark S. Squillante, et al.
IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering
Matthias Kaiserswerth
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking
Chidanand Apté, Fred Damerau, et al.
ACM Transactions on Information Systems (TOIS)
Khaled A.S. Abdel-Ghaffar
IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory