Cohen, W.W. (1995b)
"Pac-learning Recursive Logic Programs: Negative Results",
Volume 2, pages 541-573.
Abstract: In a companion paper it was shown that the class of
constant-depth determinate k-ary recursive clauses is efficiently
learnable. In this paper we present negative results showing that any
natural generalization of this class is hard to learn in Valiant's
model of pac-learnability. In particular, we show that the following
program classes are cryptographically hard to learn: programs with an
unbounded number of constant-depth linear recursive clauses; programs
with one constant-depth determinate clause containing an unbounded
number of recursive calls; and programs with one linear recursive
clause of constant locality. These results immediately imply the
non-learnability of any more general class of programs. We also show
that learning a constant-depth determinate program with either two
linear recursive clauses or one linear recursive clause and one
non-recursive clause is as hard as learning boolean DNF. Together
with positive results from the companion paper, these negative results
establish a boundary of efficient learnability for recursive
function-free clauses.
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