scispace - formally typeset
N

Nick Reingold

Researcher at Bell Labs

Publications -  20
Citations -  1469

Nick Reingold is an academic researcher from Bell Labs. The author has contributed to research in topics: Competitive analysis & Deterministic algorithm. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 20 publications receiving 1430 citations. Previous affiliations of Nick Reingold include AT&T Labs & Yale University.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Deriving traffic demands for operational IP networks: methodology and experience

TL;DR: This paper presents a model of traffic demands to support traffic engineering and performance debugging of large Internet Service Provider networks, and shows how to infer interdomain traffic demands using measurements collected at a smaller number of edge links-the peering links connecting the neighboring providers.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

PP is closed under intersection

TL;DR: It is shown that PP is closed under a variety of polynomial-time truth-table reductions and in complexity theory include the definite collapse and (assuming P ? PP) separation of certain query hierarchies over PP.
Journal ArticleDOI

Deriving traffic demands for operational IP networks: methodology and experience

TL;DR: A model of traffic demands to support traffic engineering and performance debugging of large Internet Service Provider networks is presented and how to infer interdomain traffic demands is shown using measurements collected at a smaller number of edge links --- the peering links connecting to neighboring providers.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Randomized competitive algorithms for the list update problem

TL;DR: A simple and elegant randomized algorithm that is more competitive than the best previous randomized algorithm due to Irani is given, and is the first randomized competitive algorithm with this property to beat the deterministic lower bound.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

The perceptron strikes back

TL;DR: It is shown that every AC/sup 0/ predicate is computed by a low-degree probabilistic polynomial over the reals, and every language recognized by a depth-d AC/Sup 0/ circuit is decidable by a Probabilistic perceptron of size 2 to the power O(log/sup 4d/ n) and of order O( log/sup 3/ n).