first-order reduction

In computer science, a first-order reduction is a very strong type of reduction between two computational problems in computational complexity theory. A first-order reduction is a reduction where each component is restricted to be in the class FO of problems calculable in first-order logic.

Since we have \mbox{FO} \subsetneq \mbox{L}, the first-order reductions are stronger reductions than the logspace reductions.

Many important complexity classes are closed under first-order reductions, and many of the traditional complete problems are first-order complete as well (Immerman 1999 p. 49-50). For example, ST-connectivity is FO-complete for NL, and NL is closed under FO reductions (Immerman 1999, p. 51) (as are P, NP, and most other "well-behaved" classes).

References

  • {{cite book | last = Immerman | first = Neil | authorlink = Neil Immerman | title = Descriptive Complexity |title-link= Descriptive Complexity | year = 1999 | publisher = Springer-Verlag | location = New York | isbn = 0-387-98600-6}}

Category:Descriptive complexity

Category:Reduction (complexity)

{{comp-sci-theory-stub}}

{{mathlogic-stub}}