on the robustness of dictatorships: spectral methods

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On the robustness of dictatorships: spectral methods . Ehud Friedgut , Hebrew University, Jerusalem

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On the robustness of dictatorships: spectral methods. Ehud Friedgut, Hebrew University, Jerusalem. Erdős-Ko-Rado (‘61). 407 links in Google 44 papers in MathSciNet with E.K.R. in the title (not including the original one, of course.). The Erdős-Ko-Rado theorem. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

On the robustness of dictatorships:

spectral methods.Ehud Friedgut,

Hebrew University, Jerusalem

Page 2: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Erdős-Ko-Rado (‘61)

• 407 links in Google

• 44 papers in MathSciNet with E.K.R. in the title (not including the original one, of course.)

Page 3: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

The Erdős-Ko-Rado theorem

A fundamental theorem of extremal set theory:

Extremal example: flower.

Page 4: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Product-measure analogue

Extremal example: dictatorship.

Page 5: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

The Ahlswede-Khachatriantheorem (special case)

Etc...

Or...

Or...

Page 6: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Product-measure analogue

Extremal example: duumvirate.

Page 7: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Beyond p < 1/3.

First observed and provenby Dinur and Safra.

Page 8: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

From the measure-case to extremal set theory and back

Dinur and Safra proved the measure-results via

E.K.R. and Ahlswede-Khachatrian.

Here we attempt to prove measure-results using spectral methods, and deduce some corollaries in extremal set theory.

Page 9: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

RobustnessA major incentive to use spectral

analysis on the discrete cube as a tool for

proving theorems in extremal set theory:

Proving robustness statements.

“Close to maximal size close to optimal structure”.

*

*Look for the purple star…

Page 10: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Intersection theorems,spectral methods…

Some people who did related work(there must be many others too):

Alon, Calderbank, Delsarte, Dinur,Frankl, Friedgut, Furedi, Hoffman,Lovász, Schrijver, Sudakov,Wilson...

Page 11: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Theorem 1

*

Page 12: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Corollary 1*

Page 13: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Theorem 2

*

Page 14: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Corollary 2*

Page 15: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

t-intersecting familiesfor t>1

We will use the case t=2 to represent all t>1, the differences are merely

technical.

Page 16: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Digression:

Inspiration from a proof of a graph theoretic result

Page 17: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Spectral methods:Hoffman’s theorem

Page 18: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Hoffman’s theorem,sketch of proof

Page 19: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Sketch of proof, continued

Page 20: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Sketch of proof, continued

Page 21: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Sketch of proof, concluded

Page 22: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Stability observation:

Equality holds in Hoffman’s theorem only if the characteristic function of a maximal independent set is always a linear combination of the trivial eigenvector (1,1,...,1) and the eigenvectors corresponding to the minimal eigenvalue.

Also, “almost equality” implies “almost”the above statement.

Page 23: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Intersecting families and independent sets

Consider the graph whose vertices arethe subsets of {1,2,...,n}, with an edge between two vertices iff the correspondingsets are disjoint.

Intersecting family Independent set

Can we mimic Hoffman’s proof?

Page 24: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Problems...

• The graph isn’t regular, (1,1,...,1) isn’t an eigenvector.

• Coming to think of it, what are the eigenvectors? How can we compute them?

• Even if we could find them, they’re orthogonal with respect to the uniform measure, but we’re interested in a different product measure.

Page 25: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Let’s look at the adjacency matrix

Ø

Ø

{1}

{1}

Ø {1} {2} {1,2}

Ø{1}{2}{1,2}

This is good, because we can now computethe eigenvectors and eigenvalues of

Page 26: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

But...

These are not the eigenvectors we want...

...However, looking back at Hoffman’sproof we notice that...

holds only because of the 0’s for non-edgesin A, not because of the 1’s. So...

Page 27: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Pseudo adjacency matrix

ReplaceØ

Ø

{1}

{1}

By

It turns out that a judicious choice is

Page 28: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Now everything works...

Their tensor products form an orthonormalbasis for the product space with the product measure, and Hoffman’s proof goes through (mutatis mutandis), yielding that if I is an independent set then μ(I)≤p.

Page 29: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Remarks...

It is associated with eigenvectorsof the type henceforth “first level eigenvectors”

This is the minimal eigenvalue,provided that p < ½ (!)

Page 30: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Boolean functions; Some facts of life

• Trivial : If all the Fourier coefficients are on levels 0 and 1 then the function is a dictatorship.

• Non trivial (FKN): If almost all the weight of the Fourier coefficients is on levels 0 and 1 then the function is close to a dictatorship.

• Deep (Bourgain, Kindler-Safra): Something similar is true if almost all the weight is on levels 0,1,…,k.

Page 31: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Remarks, continued...

• These facts of life, together with the “stability observation” following Hoffman’s proof imply the uniqueness and robustness of the extremal examples, the dictatorships .

• The proof only works for p< ½ ! (At p=1/2 the minimal eigenvalue shifts from one set of eigenvectors to another)

Page 32: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

2-intersecting families

Can we repeat this proof for 2-intersecting

families?

Let’s start by taking a look at the adjacency

matrix...

Page 33: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

The 2-intersecting adjacencymatrix

This doesn’tlook like the tensor productof smallermatrices...

Page 34: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Understanding the intersection matrices

The “0” in

(the 1-intersection matrix) warned us that when we add the same element to two disjoint sets they become intersecting.

Now we want to be more tolerant:

Page 35: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Different tactics for 2-intersecting

One common element= “warning”

But “two strikes, and yer out!’”

We need an element such that

Obvious solution:

Page 36: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Working over a ring

The solution: work over

Ø {1} {2} {1,2}Ø{1}{2}{1,2}

Ø {1}Ø

{1}

Page 37: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Now becomes...

2-Intersection matrix over

Page 38: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Working over a ring, continued...

• Same as before: we wish to replace

by some matrix to obtain the

“proper” eigenvectors.

• Different than before: the eigenvalues are now ring elements, so there’s no “minimal eigenvalue”.

Page 39: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Working over the ring, cont’d

Identities such as

Now become ,so, comparing coefficients, we canget a separate equation for the ηsand for the ρs…

…and after replacing the equalitiesby inequalities solve a L.P. problem

Page 40: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

…More problems

However, the ηs and the ρs do not tensorseparately (they’re not products of the

coefficients in the case n=1 ).

Page 41: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Lord of the rings, part IIIIt turns out that now one has to know thevalue of n in advance before plugging thevalues into

If you plug in

a ***miracle*** happens...

Page 42: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

2-intersecting - conclusion

...The solution of the L.P. is such that all the non-zero coefficients must belong only to thefirst level eigenvectors, or the second level eigenvectors.

Using some additional analysis of Boolean functions (involving [Kindler-Safra]) one may

finally prove the uniqueness and robustness result about duumvirates. Oh..., and the miracle breaks down at

p =1/3…

Page 43: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Questions...

• What about 3-intersecting families? (slight optimism.) • What about p > 1/3 ? (slight pessimism.)• What about families with no (heavy pessimism.)

• Stability results in coding theory and association schemes?...

?

Page 44: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods

Time will tell...

Have we struck a small gold mine...

...or just found a shiny coin?

Page 45: On the robustness of dictatorships:  spectral methods