In the computational complexity theory, the low hierarchy and high hierarchy of complexity levels were introduced in 1983 by Uwe Schöning to describe the internal structure of the complexity class NP.[1] The low hierarchy starts from complexity class P and grows "upwards", while the high hierarchy starts from class NP and grows "downwards".[2]
Later these hierarchies were extended to sets outside NP.
The framework of high/low hierarchies makes sense only under the assumption that P is not NP. On the other hand, if the low hierarchy consists of at least two levels, then P is not NP.[3]
It is not known whether these hierarchies cover all NP.
References
edit- ^ Uwe Schöning (1983). "A Low and a High Hierarchy within NP". J. Comput. Syst. Sci. 27 (1): 14–28. doi:10.1016/0022-0000(83)90027-2.
- ^ "Complexity Theory and Cryptology", by Jörg Rothe p. 232
- ^ Lane A. Hemaspaandra, "Lowness: a yardstick for NP-P", ACM SIGACT News, 1993, vol. 24, no.2, pp. 11-14. doi:10.1145/156063.156064