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Main Authors: Micun, Matthäus, Berkholz, Christoph
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.12378
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author Micun, Matthäus
Berkholz, Christoph
author_facet Micun, Matthäus
Berkholz, Christoph
contents Since their introduction by Atserias, Kolaitis, and Vardi in 2004, proof systems where each line is represented by an ordered binary decision diagram (OBDD) have been intensively studied as they allow to compactly represent Boolean functions. We extend this line of work by considering representation formats that can be even more succinct than OBDDs and have gained a lot of attention in the area of knowledge compilation: sentential decision diagrams (SDDs) and deterministic structured DNNF circuits (d-SDNNFs). We show that both variants can provide strictly smaller refutations of unsatisfiable CNFs than their OBDD counterparts. Furthermore, we investigate the relative strength of these systems depending on which of the three fundamental derivation rules join, reordering, and weakening are allowed. Here we obtain several separations and identify interesting open problems. To streamline our proofs we establish a sat-to-unsat lifting theorem that might be of independent interest: it turns satisfiable CNFs that are hard to represent by SDDs and d-SDNNFs into unsatisfiable CNFs that are hard to refute in the corresponding proof system.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2605_12378
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Proof Systems Based on Structured Circuits
Micun, Matthäus
Berkholz, Christoph
Computational Complexity
Since their introduction by Atserias, Kolaitis, and Vardi in 2004, proof systems where each line is represented by an ordered binary decision diagram (OBDD) have been intensively studied as they allow to compactly represent Boolean functions. We extend this line of work by considering representation formats that can be even more succinct than OBDDs and have gained a lot of attention in the area of knowledge compilation: sentential decision diagrams (SDDs) and deterministic structured DNNF circuits (d-SDNNFs). We show that both variants can provide strictly smaller refutations of unsatisfiable CNFs than their OBDD counterparts. Furthermore, we investigate the relative strength of these systems depending on which of the three fundamental derivation rules join, reordering, and weakening are allowed. Here we obtain several separations and identify interesting open problems. To streamline our proofs we establish a sat-to-unsat lifting theorem that might be of independent interest: it turns satisfiable CNFs that are hard to represent by SDDs and d-SDNNFs into unsatisfiable CNFs that are hard to refute in the corresponding proof system.
title Proof Systems Based on Structured Circuits
topic Computational Complexity
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.12378