55,518 research outputs found
On the Minimum/Stopping Distance of Array Low-Density Parity-Check Codes
In this work, we study the minimum/stopping distance of array low-density
parity-check (LDPC) codes. An array LDPC code is a quasi-cyclic LDPC code
specified by two integers q and m, where q is an odd prime and m <= q. In the
literature, the minimum/stopping distance of these codes (denoted by d(q,m) and
h(q,m), respectively) has been thoroughly studied for m <= 5. Both exact
results, for small values of q and m, and general (i.e., independent of q)
bounds have been established. For m=6, the best known minimum distance upper
bound, derived by Mittelholzer (IEEE Int. Symp. Inf. Theory, Jun./Jul. 2002),
is d(q,6) <= 32. In this work, we derive an improved upper bound of d(q,6) <=
20 and a new upper bound d(q,7) <= 24 by using the concept of a template
support matrix of a codeword/stopping set. The bounds are tight with high
probability in the sense that we have not been able to find codewords of
strictly lower weight for several values of q using a minimum distance
probabilistic algorithm. Finally, we provide new specific minimum/stopping
distance results for m <= 7 and low-to-moderate values of q <= 79.Comment: To appear in IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory. The material in this paper was
presented in part at the 2014 IEEE International Symposium on Information
Theory, Honolulu, HI, June/July 201
Decoding Cyclic Codes up to a New Bound on the Minimum Distance
A new lower bound on the minimum distance of q-ary cyclic codes is proposed.
This bound improves upon the Bose-Chaudhuri-Hocquenghem (BCH) bound and, for
some codes, upon the Hartmann-Tzeng (HT) bound. Several Boston bounds are
special cases of our bound. For some classes of codes the bound on the minimum
distance is refined. Furthermore, a quadratic-time decoding algorithm up to
this new bound is developed. The determination of the error locations is based
on the Euclidean Algorithm and a modified Chien search. The error evaluation is
done by solving a generalization of Forney's formula
Decoding of Repeated-Root Cyclic Codes up to New Bounds on Their Minimum Distance
The well-known approach of Bose, Ray-Chaudhuri and Hocquenghem and its
generalization by Hartmann and Tzeng are lower bounds on the minimum distance
of simple-root cyclic codes. We generalize these two bounds to the case of
repeated-root cyclic codes and present a syndrome-based burst error decoding
algorithm with guaranteed decoding radius based on an associated folded cyclic
code. Furthermore, we present a third technique for bounding the minimum
Hamming distance based on the embedding of a given repeated-root cyclic code
into a repeated-root cyclic product code. A second quadratic-time probabilistic
burst error decoding procedure based on the third bound is outlined. Index
Terms Bound on the minimum distance, burst error, efficient decoding, folded
code, repeated-root cyclic code, repeated-root cyclic product cod
Permutation Decoding and the Stopping Redundancy Hierarchy of Cyclic and Extended Cyclic Codes
We introduce the notion of the stopping redundancy hierarchy of a linear
block code as a measure of the trade-off between performance and complexity of
iterative decoding for the binary erasure channel. We derive lower and upper
bounds for the stopping redundancy hierarchy via Lovasz's Local Lemma and
Bonferroni-type inequalities, and specialize them for codes with cyclic
parity-check matrices. Based on the observed properties of parity-check
matrices with good stopping redundancy characteristics, we develop a novel
decoding technique, termed automorphism group decoding, that combines iterative
message passing and permutation decoding. We also present bounds on the
smallest number of permutations of an automorphism group decoder needed to
correct any set of erasures up to a prescribed size. Simulation results
demonstrate that for a large number of algebraic codes, the performance of the
new decoding method is close to that of maximum likelihood decoding.Comment: 40 pages, 6 figures, 10 tables, submitted to IEEE Transactions on
Information Theor
Bounds on Binary Locally Repairable Codes Tolerating Multiple Erasures
Recently, locally repairable codes has gained significant interest for their
potential applications in distributed storage systems. However, most
constructions in existence are over fields with size that grows with the number
of servers, which makes the systems computationally expensive and difficult to
maintain. Here, we study linear locally repairable codes over the binary field,
tolerating multiple local erasures. We derive bounds on the minimum distance on
such codes, and give examples of LRCs achieving these bounds. Our main
technical tools come from matroid theory, and as a byproduct of our proofs, we
show that the lattice of cyclic flats of a simple binary matroid is atomic.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure. Parts of this paper were presented at IZS 2018.
This extended arxiv version includes corrected versions of Theorem 1.4 and
Proposition 6 that appeared in the IZS 2018 proceeding
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