159 research outputs found

    Book Review

    Get PDF
    A Scholarly Review of “Error Control for Network-On-Chip Links” (Authors: Bo Fu and Paul Ampadu, 2012)Fu, B.; and Ampadu, P. 2012. Error Control for Network-On-Chip Links.Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, New York, NY, USA.Available: <http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-9313-7>

    Multiplicatively Repeated Non-Binary LDPC Codes

    Full text link
    We propose non-binary LDPC codes concatenated with multiplicative repetition codes. By multiplicatively repeating the (2,3)-regular non-binary LDPC mother code of rate 1/3, we construct rate-compatible codes of lower rates 1/6, 1/9, 1/12,... Surprisingly, such simple low-rate non-binary LDPC codes outperform the best low-rate binary LDPC codes so far. Moreover, we propose the decoding algorithm for the proposed codes, which can be decoded with almost the same computational complexity as that of the mother code.Comment: To appear in IEEE Transactions on Information Theor

    Bilayer Low-Density Parity-Check Codes for Decode-and-Forward in Relay Channels

    Full text link
    This paper describes an efficient implementation of binning for the relay channel using low-density parity-check (LDPC) codes. We devise bilayer LDPC codes to approach the theoretically promised rate of the decode-and-forward relaying strategy by incorporating relay-generated information bits in specially designed bilayer graphical code structures. While conventional LDPC codes are sensitively tuned to operate efficiently at a certain channel parameter, the proposed bilayer LDPC codes are capable of working at two different channel parameters and two different rates: that at the relay and at the destination. To analyze the performance of bilayer LDPC codes, bilayer density evolution is devised as an extension of the standard density evolution algorithm. Based on bilayer density evolution, a design methodology is developed for the bilayer codes in which the degree distribution is iteratively improved using linear programming. Further, in order to approach the theoretical decode-and-forward rate for a wide range of channel parameters, this paper proposes two different forms bilayer codes, the bilayer-expurgated and bilayer-lengthened codes. It is demonstrated that a properly designed bilayer LDPC code can achieve an asymptotic infinite-length threshold within 0.24 dB gap to the Shannon limits of two different channels simultaneously for a wide range of channel parameters. By practical code construction, finite-length bilayer codes are shown to be able to approach within a 0.6 dB gap to the theoretical decode-and-forward rate of the relay channel at a block length of 10510^5 and a bit-error probability (BER) of 10410^{-4}. Finally, it is demonstrated that a generalized version of the proposed bilayer code construction is applicable to relay networks with multiple relays.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Trans. Info. Theor

    Efficient Information Reconciliation for Quantum Key Distribution = Reconciliación eficiente de información para la distribución cuántica de claves

    Full text link
    Advances in modern cryptography for secret-key agreement are driving the development of new methods and techniques in key distillation. Most of these developments, focusing on information reconciliation and privacy amplification, are for the direct benefit of quantum key distribution (QKD). In this context, information reconciliation has historically been done using heavily interactive protocols, i.e. with a high number of channel communications, such as the well-known Cascade. In this work we show how modern coding techniques can improve the performance of these methods for information reconciliation in QKD. Here, we propose the use of low-density parity-check (LDPC) codes, since they are good both in efficiency and throughput. A price to pay, a priori, using LDPC codes is that good efficiency is only attained for very long codes and in a very narrow range of error rates. This forces to use several codes in cases when the error rate varies significantly in different uses of the channel, a common situation for instance in QKD. To overcome these problems, this study examines various techniques for adapting LDPC codes, thus reducing the number of codes needed to cover the target range of error rates. These techniques are also used to improve the average efficiency of short-length LDPC codes based on a feedback coding scheme. The importance of short codes lies in the fact that they can be used for high throughput hardware implementations. In a further advancement, a protocol is proposed that avoids the a priori error rate estimation required in other approaches. This blind protocol also brings interesting implications to the finite key analysis. Los avances en la criptografía moderna para el acuerdo de clave secreta están empujando el desarrollo de nuevos métodos y técnicas para la destilación de claves. La mayoría de estos desarrollos, centrados en la reconciliación de información y la amplificación de privacidad, proporcionan un beneficio directo para la distribución cuántica de claves (QKD). En este contexto, la reconciliación de información se ha realizado históricamente por medio de protocolos altamente interativos, es decir, con un alto número de comunicaciones, tal y como ocurre con el protocolo Cascade. En este trabajo mostramos cómo las técnicas de codificación modernas pueden mejorar el rendimiento de estos métodos para la reconciliación de información en QKD. Proponemos el uso de códigos low-density parity-check (LDPC), puesto que estos son buenos tanto en eficiencia como en tasa de corrección. Un precio a pagar, a priori, utilizando códigos LDPC es que una buena eficiencia sólo se alcanza para códigos muy largos y en un rango de error limitado. Este hecho nos obliga a utilizar varios códigos en aquellos casos en los que la tasa de error varía significativamente para distintos usos del canal, una situación común por ejemplo en QKD. Para superar estos problemas, en este trabajo analizamos varias técnicas para la adaptación de códigos LDPC, y así poder reducir el número de códigos necesarios para cubrir el rango de errores deseado. Estas técnicas son también utilizadas para mejorar la eficiencia promedio de códigos LDPC cortos en un esquema de codificación con retroalimentación o realimentación (mensaje de retorno). El interés de los códigos cortos reside en el vii hecho de que estos pueden ser utilizados para implementaciones hardware de alto rendimiento. En un avance posterior, proponemos un nuevo protocolo que evita la estimación inicial de la tasa de error, requerida en otras propuestas. Este protocolo ciego también nos brinda implicaciones interesantes en el análisis de clave finita

    The application of forward error correction techniques in wireless ATM

    Get PDF
    Bibliography: pages 116-121.The possibility of providing wireless access to an ATM network promises nomadic users a communication tool of unparalleled power and flexibility. Unfortunately, the physical realization of a wireless A TM system is fraught with technical difficulties, not the least of which is the problem of supporting a traditional ATM protocol over a non-benign wireless link. The objective of this thesis, titled "The Application of Forward Error Correction Techniques in Wireless ATM' is to examine the feasibility of using forward error correction techniques to improve the perceived channel characteristics to the extent that the channel becomes transparent to the higher layers and allows the use of an unmodified A TM protocol over the channel. In the course of the investigation that this dissertation describes, three possible error control strategies were suggested for implementation in a generic wireless channel. These schemes used a combination of forward error correction coding schemes, automatic repeat request schemes and interleavers to combat the impact of bit errors on the performance of the link. The following error control strategies were considered : 1. A stand alone fixed rate Reed-Solomon encoder/decoder with automatic repeat request. 2. A concatenated Reed-Solomon, convolution encoder/decoder with automatic request and convolution interleaving for the convolution codec. 3. A dynamic rate encoder/decoder using either a concatenated Reed-Solomon, convolution scheme or a Reed-Solomon only scheme with variable length Reed-Solomon words

    A protection scheme for multimedia packet streams in bursty packet loss networks based on small block low-density parity-check codes

    Get PDF
    This paper proposes an enhanced forward error correction (FEC) scheme based on small block low-density parity-check (LDPC) codes to protect real-time packetized multimedia streams in bursty channels. The use of LDPC codes is typically addressed for channels where losses are uniformly distributed (memoryless channels) and for large information blocks. This work suggests the use of this type of FEC codes at the application layer, in bursty channels (e.g., Internet protocol (IP)-based networks) and for real-time scenarios that require low transmission latency. To fulfil these constraints, the appropriate configuration parameters of an LDPC scheme have been determined using small blocks of information and adapting the FEC code to be capable of recovering packet losses in bursty environments. This purpose is achieved in two steps. The first step is performed by an algorithm that estimates the recovery capability of a given LDPC code in a burst packet loss network. The second step is the optimization of the code: an algorithm optimizes the parity matrix structure in terms of recovery capability against the specific behavior of the channel with memory. Experimental results have been obtained in a simulated transmission channel to show that the optimized LDPC matrices generate a more robust protection scheme against bursty packet losses for small information blocks
    corecore