The Proof Analysis Problem
This work provides new insights into proof complexity, particularly regarding automatability and hardness of lower bounds, for researchers in computational complexity.
The authors prove that short Resolution refutations of the formula Ref(φ) explicitly leak a satisfying assignment of φ, giving a polynomial-time extraction algorithm. They also introduce the Proof Analysis Problem (PAP) and show it is NP-complete for Extended Frege, while for Resolution it is tractable.
Atserias and Müller (JACM, 2020) proved that for every unsatisfiable CNF formula $φ$, the formula $\operatorname{Ref}(φ)$, stating "$φ$ has small Resolution refutations", does not have subexponential-size Resolution refutations. Conversely, when $φ$ is satisfiable, Pudlák (TCS, 2003) showed how to construct a polynomial-size Resolution refutation of $\operatorname{Ref}(φ)$ given a satisfying assignment of $φ$. A question that remained open is: do all short Resolution refutations of $\operatorname{Ref}(φ)$ explicitly leak a satisfying assignment of $φ$? We answer this question affirmatively by giving a polynomial-time algorithm that extracts a satisfying assignment for $φ$ given any short Resolution refutation of $\operatorname{Ref}(φ)$. The algorithm follows from a new feasibly constructive proof of the Atserias-Müller lower bound, formalizable in Cook's theory $\mathsf{PV_1}$ of bounded arithmetic. Motivated by this, we introduce a computational problem concerning Resolution lower bounds: the Proof Analysis Problem (PAP). For a proof system $Q$, the Proof Analysis Problem for $Q$ asks, given a CNF formula $φ$ and a $Q$-proof of a Resolution lower bound for $φ$, encoded as $\neg \operatorname{Ref}(φ)$, whether $φ$ is satisfiable. In contrast to PAP for Resolution, we prove that PAP for Extended Frege (EF) is NP-complete. Our results yield new insights into proof complexity: (i) every proof system simulating EF is (weakly) automatable if and only if it is (weakly) automatable on formulas stating Resolution lower bounds; (ii) we provide Ref formulas exponentially hard for bounded-depth Frege systems; and (iii) for every strong enough theory of arithmetic $T$ we construct unsatisfiable CNF formulas exponentially hard for Resolution but for which $T$ cannot prove even a quadratic lower bound.