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In Regev's Paper "On Lattices, Learning with Errors, Random Linear Codes, and Cryptography" he considers in the introduction of the paper the "learning from parity with error". Where we have an unknown $s \in \mathbb{Z}_2^n$ our goal is to find this $s$, given a list of equations with errors e.g. $\langle s,a_i \rangle \approx b_i (\text{ mod } 2)$ etc. The $a_i$'s are chosen independently from the uniform distribution on $\mathbb{Z}_2^n$, $\langle s, a_i\rangle = \sum_j s_j (a_i)_j$ is the inner product modulo 2 of $s$ and $a$, each equation is correct with probability $1-\epsilon$. With no error we would be able to solve a system of equations using Gaussian elimination, this is understandable.

Regev goes a bit further and considers the Gaussian elimination process and assuming that we are interested in recovering only the first bit of $s$. He says using Gaussian elimination, we can find a set $S$ of $O(n)$ equations such that $\sum_S a_i$ is $(1,0,...,0)$. Summing the corresponding values $b_i$ gives us a guess for the first bit of $s$.

The part that I don't understand and this is my question: He says with a standard calculation one can show that this guess is correct with probability $\frac{1}{2} + 2^{-\Theta(n)}$. How exactly does one arrive this estimate, what is this standard calculation? I don't quite understand it, so I wanted to ask this question here.

I hope that my question is understandable. I thank you for helpful comments/answers.

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For a given linear equation $\langle s,a_i\rangle$ there is associated claimed answer $b_i$. We call this value correct if $\langle s,a_i\rangle=b_i$ and incorrect if $\langle s,a_i\rangle=b_i\oplus 1$. Note that we can form a new equation from two or more equations by mod 2 addition e.g. $\langle s,a_i\oplus a_j\rangle$ and associate to this claimed answer $b_i\oplus b_j$. Our claim will be correct if either both $b_i$ are correct or both are incorrect. In general when combining equations, the new equation's claimed answer will be correct if an even number of the combined $b_i$ are incorrect.

Suppose that $S$ consists of $k$ equations, we sum $k$ values of $b_i$ modulo 2 and if an even number of them represent the incorrect value, then the sum of $b_i$ is equal to the sum of correct values. By the binomial theorem the chance that exactly $c$ of the $b_i$ values are incorrect is $\binom{k}c(1-\epsilon)^{k-c}\epsilon^{c}$. Thus the total probability of a correct guess is $$\sum_{d=0}^{[k/2]}\binom{k}{2d}(1-\epsilon)^{k-2d}\epsilon^{2d}$$ comparing terms in the binomial expansions of $((1-\epsilon)+\epsilon)^k$ and $((1-\epsilon)-\epsilon)^k$ we see that the above expression is $$\frac12\left(\left((1-\epsilon)+\epsilon\right)^k+\left((1-\epsilon)-\epsilon\right)^k\right)=\frac12\left(1+(1-2\epsilon)^k\right).$$ Now for large $k$ and fixed $\epsilon$ we have $(1-2\epsilon)^k\approx \exp(-2k\epsilon)=2^{-O(n)}$ as required.

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  • $\begingroup$ Hi Daniel, thanks for your reply. I understood everything from the binomial theorem onwards, but could you maybe elaborate a bit more on the part before that? How do you mean that exactly with the "correct value"? Thanks again! $\endgroup$
    – P_Gate
    Commented Nov 6, 2022 at 10:36
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    $\begingroup$ I've added some words at the start and tidied things up a bit. $\endgroup$
    – Daniel S
    Commented Nov 6, 2022 at 11:08
  • $\begingroup$ Hi Daniel, thanks for this great addition! It helps a lot! When calculating the probability, can it be that you have correctly and incorrectly mixed up something? The sum represents the incorrect probability, right? $\endgroup$
    – P_Gate
    Commented Nov 6, 2022 at 11:32
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    $\begingroup$ I'm not immune to parity errors, but I think that the sum is the sum over situations where there are an even number ($2d$) of incorrect answers being combined so that the in each situation the combined expression is correct. It's certainly worth checking though. $\endgroup$
    – Daniel S
    Commented Nov 6, 2022 at 11:40

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