1,364 research outputs found
Multicasting Homogeneous and Heterogeneous Quantum States in Quantum Networks
In this paper, we target the practical implementation issues of quantum
multicast networks. First, we design a recursive lossless compression that
allows us to control the trade-off between the circuit complexity and the
dimension of the compressed quantum state. We give a formula that describes the
trade-off, and further analyze how the formula is affected by the controlling
parameter of the recursive procedure. Our recursive lossless compression can be
applied in a quantum multicast network where the source outputs homogeneous
quantum states (many copies of a quantum state) to a set of destinations
through a bottleneck. Such a recursive lossless compression is extremely useful
in the current situation where the technology of producing large-scale quantum
circuits is limited. Second, we develop two lossless compression schemes that
work for heterogeneous quantum states (many copies of a set of quantum states)
when the set of quantum states satisfies a certain structure. The heterogeneous
compression schemes provide extra compressing power over the homogeneous
compression scheme. Finally, we realize our heterogeneous compression schemes
in several quantum multicast networks, including the single-source
multi-terminal model, the multi-source multi-terminal model, and the ring
networks. We then analyze the bandwidth requirements for these network models.Comment: 24 pages, 9 figure
On practical design for joint distributed source and network coding
This paper considers the problem of communicating correlated information from multiple source nodes over a network of noiseless channels to multiple destination nodes, where each destination node wants to recover all sources. The problem involves a joint consideration of distributed compression and network information relaying. Although the optimal rate region has been theoretically characterized, it was not clear how to design practical communication schemes with low complexity. This work provides a partial solution to this problem by proposing a low-complexity scheme for the special case with two sources whose correlation is characterized by a binary symmetric channel. Our scheme is based on a careful combination of linear syndrome-based Slepian-Wolf coding and random linear mixing (network coding). It is in general suboptimal; however, its low complexity and robustness to network dynamics make it suitable for practical implementation
Communicating the sum of sources over a network
We consider the network communication scenario, over directed acyclic
networks with unit capacity edges in which a number of sources each
holding independent unit-entropy information wish to communicate the sum
to a set of terminals . We show that in the case in which
there are only two sources or only two terminals, communication is possible if
and only if each source terminal pair is connected by at least a
single path. For the more general communication problem in which there are
three sources and three terminals, we prove that a single path connecting the
source terminal pairs does not suffice to communicate . We then
present an efficient encoding scheme which enables the communication of
for the three sources, three terminals case, given that each source
terminal pair is connected by {\em two} edge disjoint paths.Comment: 12 pages, IEEE JSAC: Special Issue on In-network
Computation:Exploring the Fundamental Limits (to appear
Correlation-Aware Distributed Caching and Coded Delivery
Cache-aided coded multicast leverages side information at wireless edge
caches to efficiently serve multiple groupcast demands via common multicast
transmissions, leading to load reductions that are proportional to the
aggregate cache size. However, the increasingly unpredictable and personalized
nature of the content that users consume challenges the efficiency of existing
caching-based solutions in which only exact content reuse is explored. This
paper generalizes the cache-aided coded multicast problem to a source
compression with distributed side information problem that specifically
accounts for the correlation among the content files. It is shown how joint
file compression during the caching and delivery phases can provide load
reductions that go beyond those achieved with existing schemes. This is
accomplished through a lower bound on the fundamental rate-memory trade-off as
well as a correlation-aware achievable scheme, shown to significantly
outperform state-of-the-art correlation-unaware solutions, while approaching
the limiting rate-memory trade-off.Comment: In proceeding of IEEE Information Theory Workshop (ITW), 201
Cache-Aided Coded Multicast for Correlated Sources
The combination of edge caching and coded multicasting is a promising
approach to improve the efficiency of content delivery over cache-aided
networks. The global caching gain resulting from content overlap distributed
across the network in current solutions is limited due to the increasingly
personalized nature of the content consumed by users. In this paper, the
cache-aided coded multicast problem is generalized to account for the
correlation among the network content by formulating a source compression
problem with distributed side information. A correlation-aware achievable
scheme is proposed and an upper bound on its performance is derived. It is
shown that considerable load reductions can be achieved, compared to state of
the art correlation-unaware schemes, when caching and delivery phases
specifically account for the correlation among the content files.Comment: In proceeding of IEEE International Symposium on Turbo Codes and
Iterative Information Processing (ISTC), 201
Random Linear Network Coding for 5G Mobile Video Delivery
An exponential increase in mobile video delivery will continue with the
demand for higher resolution, multi-view and large-scale multicast video
services. Novel fifth generation (5G) 3GPP New Radio (NR) standard will bring a
number of new opportunities for optimizing video delivery across both 5G core
and radio access networks. One of the promising approaches for video quality
adaptation, throughput enhancement and erasure protection is the use of
packet-level random linear network coding (RLNC). In this review paper, we
discuss the integration of RLNC into the 5G NR standard, building upon the
ideas and opportunities identified in 4G LTE. We explicitly identify and
discuss in detail novel 5G NR features that provide support for RLNC-based
video delivery in 5G, thus pointing out to the promising avenues for future
research.Comment: Invited paper for Special Issue "Network and Rateless Coding for
Video Streaming" - MDPI Informatio
Broadcast Caching Networks with Two Receivers and Multiple Correlated Sources
The correlation among the content distributed across a cache-aided broadcast
network can be exploited to reduce the delivery load on the shared wireless
link. This paper considers a two-user three-file network with correlated
content, and studies its fundamental limits for the worst-case demand. A class
of achievable schemes based on a two-step source coding approach is proposed.
Library files are first compressed using Gray-Wyner source coding, and then
cached and delivered using a combination of correlation-unaware cache-aided
coded multicast schemes. The second step is interesting in its own right and
considers a multiple-request caching problem, whose solution requires coding in
the placement phase. A lower bound on the optimal peak rate-memory trade-off is
derived, which is used to evaluate the performance of the proposed scheme. It
is shown that for symmetric sources the two-step strategy achieves the lower
bound for large cache capacities, and it is within half of the joint entropy of
two of the sources conditioned on the third source for all other cache sizes.Comment: in Proceedings of Asilomar Conference on Signals, Systems and
Computers, Pacific Grove, California, November 201
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