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A complete problem for statistical zero knowledge
Author(s) -
Amit Sahai,
Salil Vadhan
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
journal of the acm
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.672
H-Index - 134
eISSN - 1557-735X
pISSN - 0004-5411
DOI - 10.1145/636865.636868
Subject(s) - zero knowledge proof , soundness , gas meter prover , mathematical proof , closure (psychology) , computer science , zero (linguistics) , discrete mathematics , completeness (order theory) , mathematics , theoretical computer science , programming language , mathematical analysis , linguistics , philosophy , geometry , economics , market economy
We present the first complete problem for SZK, the class of promise problems possessing statistical zero-knowledge proofs (against an honest verifier). The problem, called Statistical Difference, is to decide whether two efficiently samplable distributions are either statistically close or far apart. This gives a new characterization of SZK that makes no reference to interaction or zero knowledge.We propose the use of complete problems to unify and extend the study of statistical zero knowledge. To this end, we examine several consequences of our Completeness Theorem and its proof, such as:---A way to make every (honest-verifier) statistical zero-knowledge proof very communication efficient, with the prover sending only one bit to the verifier (to achieve soundness error 1/2).---Simpler proofs of many of the previously known results about statistical zero knowledge, such as the Fortnow and Aiello--Hεstad upper bounds on the complexity of SZK and Okamoto's result that SZK is closed under complement.---Strong closure properties of SZK that amount to constructing statistical zero-knowledge proofs for complex assertions built out of simpler assertions already shown to be in SZK.---New results about the various measures of "knowledge complexity," including a collapse in the hierarchy corresponding to knowledge complexity in the "hint" sense.---Algorithms for manipulating the statistical difference between efficiently samplable distributions, including transformations that "polarize" and "reverse" the statistical relationship between a pair of distributions.

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