For a prime $p$, let $N(p)$ be the number of solutions $1 \le x \le p$ to $x^x \equiv 1 \mod p$. I am interested in methods to bound $N(p)$.
Background: This quantity appears in Problem 1 of the Miklós Schweitzer Competition 2010 where it was asked to prove $N(p) \ll p^{c}$ for some $c<\frac{1}{2}$. Let me quickly explain how one can solve this problem and why the exponent $\frac{1}{2}$ is critical. For each divisor $d$ of $p-1$, let $A_d$ be the set of numbers $1 \le x \le p$ for which $(x;p-1)=d$ and $x^x \equiv 1 \mod p$ so $N(p)=\sum_{d \mid p-1} \vert A_d\vert$. The condition $x^x \equiv 1 \mod p$ now just says that $x$ is a $e$-th power modulo $p$ where $e=\frac{p-1}{d}$ is the complementary divisor. So trivially $\vert A_d\vert \ll \min(d,e) \ll p^{1/2}$ and hence $N(p) \ll p^{1/2+\varepsilon}$.
To improve this exponent, it clearly suffices to improve the bound for $\vert A_d\vert$ when $d \approx e \approx p^{1/2}$. Here the sum-product theorem over finite fields comes in handy: Since $A_d+A_d$ still contains essentially only multiples of $d$, it is easy to see that $\vert A_d+A_d\vert \le 2e$ and similarly $A_d \cdot A_d$ still contains only $e$-th powers so that $\vert A_d \cdot A_d\vert \le d$. Hence $\max(\vert A_d +A_d\vert, \vert A_d \cdot A_d\vert) \ll \max(d,e)$. But by the (currently best-known version of the) sum-product theorem the LHS is at least $\vert A_d\vert^{5/4-\varepsilon}$ so that we get the bound $\vert A_d\vert \ll \max(d,e)^{4/5+\varepsilon}$ and we win. Indeed, working out the exponents, we can prove $N(p) \ll p^{4/9+\varepsilon}$ this way.
Now I would be curious to learn about
Question 1: What are some other techniques that can be applied to get a non-trivial bound for $N(p)$? To be clear, I would be equally interested in (possibly more difficult) techniques that lead to an exponent $c<\frac{4}{9}$ as well as more elementary techniques that lead to a (possibly worse, but) non-trivial result.
Now even if one assumes a best possible sum-product conjecture to be true, it seems that by the method described above we could only prove $N(p) \ll p^{1/3+\varepsilon}$. On the other hand, it seems natural to conjecture that even $N(p) \ll p^{\varepsilon}$ is true, albeit very hard to prove. Given this gap, I am wondering about
Question 2: Are there some "natural/standard" conjectures that would imply an exponent less than $\frac{1}{3}$, possibly even as small as an $\varepsilon$? Or is there a good heuristic why the exponent $\frac{1}{3}$ is a natural barrier here?
EDIT: As pointed out in the answers, Cilleruelo and Garaev (2016) proved $N(p) \ll p^{27/82}$. This leaves us with the question of whether there is a natural/standard conjecture that would imply that $N(p) \ll p^{\varepsilon}$.
PS: To be clear, I don't claim that this is a very important problem on its own right. It just seems like a good toy problem to test our understanding of the interference between multiplicative and additive structures.