Revision as of 21:39, 7 March 2016 by Foster60 (Talk | contribs)


ECE Ph.D. Qualifying Exam

Computer Engineering (CE)

Question 1: Algorithms

August 2015



Question

Part 1.

In the proof of the Master Theorem, a recursion tree is considered for the general recurrence form shown below, representing the contribution of $ f() $ at internal nodes of the tree and of the $ \Theta $(1) base case at the leaves of the tree.

$ T(n) = \begin{cases} \Theta (1) & if\,n = 1 \\ aT(n/b)+f(n) & if\,n=b^i,\,for\,i>0\\ \end{cases} $

Analyzing the recurrence tree for $ n $ an exact power of $ b $, all cases of the proof rely on a $ \Theta $ bound on the contribution of the base case leaves to the sum $ T(n) $. (By asymptotically bounding this expression under the different case assumptions, each case of the Master Theorem is proven.)


$ \bullet $ What is the depth of the tree in terms of $ n,\,a\, $, and $ b $?

$ \bullet $ State the $ \Theta $ bound on the total contribution of all the leaves in the tree. Explain briefly.

$ \bullet $ Give an expression representing the contribution of all the internal nodes of the recursion tree at a given depth $ j $, explaining briefly.

Click here to view student answers and discussions

Part 2.

Professor Stillinbed has constructed a polynomial-time-bounded program that converts 3-CNF Boolean formulas into graphs. A formula with $ n $ Boolean variables and $ k $ clauses is converted into a graph with $ nk $ vertices. The professor has proven that there is a size 3 clique in the graph if and only if the original 3-CNF formula was satisfiable. Is this a notable or significant result? (In other words, does it add significantly to what is known about efficient problem solution?) Why or why not?

Click here to view student answers and discussions

Part 3.

Let $ X $ and $ Y $ be independent identically distributed exponential random variables with mean $ \mu $. Find the characteristic function of $ X+Y $.

Click here to view student answers and discussions

Part 4.

Consider a sequence of independent and identically distributed random variables $ X_1,X_2,... X_n $, where each $ X_i $ has mean $ \mu = 0 $ and variance $ \sigma^2 $. Show that for every $ i=1,...,n $ the random variables $ S_n $ and $ X_i-S_n $, where $ S_n=\sum_{j=1}^{n}X_j $ is the sample mean, are uncorrelated.

Click here to view student answers and discussions

Back to ECE Qualifying Exams (QE) page

Alumni Liaison

Recent Math PhD now doing a post-doctorate at UC Riverside.

Kuei-Nuan Lin