4,892 research outputs found
Some constant weight codes from primitive permutation groups
In recent years the detailed study of the construction of constant weight codes has been extended from length at most 28 to lengths less than 64. Andries Brouwer maintains web pages with tables of the best known constant weight codes of these lengths. In many cases the codes have more codewords than the best code in the literature, and are not particularly easy to improve. Many of the codes are constructed using a specified permutation group as automorphism group. The groups used include cyclic, quasi-cyclic, affine general linear groups etc. sometimes with fixed points. The precise rationale for the choice of groups is not clear.
In this paper the choice of groups is made systematic by the use of the classification of primitive permutation groups. Together with several improved techniques for finding a maximum clique, this has led to the construction of 39 improved constant weight codes
Commutative association schemes
Association schemes were originally introduced by Bose and his co-workers in
the design of statistical experiments. Since that point of inception, the
concept has proved useful in the study of group actions, in algebraic graph
theory, in algebraic coding theory, and in areas as far afield as knot theory
and numerical integration. This branch of the theory, viewed in this collection
of surveys as the "commutative case," has seen significant activity in the last
few decades. The goal of the present survey is to discuss the most important
new developments in several directions, including Gelfand pairs, cometric
association schemes, Delsarte Theory, spin models and the semidefinite
programming technique. The narrative follows a thread through this list of
topics, this being the contrast between combinatorial symmetry and
group-theoretic symmetry, culminating in Schrijver's SDP bound for binary codes
(based on group actions) and its connection to the Terwilliger algebra (based
on combinatorial symmetry). We propose this new role of the Terwilliger algebra
in Delsarte Theory as a central topic for future work.Comment: 36 page
Trellis decoding complexity of linear block codes
In this partially tutorial paper, we examine minimal trellis representations of linear block codes and analyze several measures of trellis complexity: maximum state and edge dimensions, total span length, and total vertices, edges and mergers. We obtain bounds on these complexities as extensions of well-known dimension/length profile (DLP) bounds. Codes meeting these bounds minimize all the complexity measures simultaneously; conversely, a code attaining the bound for total span length, vertices, or edges, must likewise attain it for all the others. We define a notion of âuniformâ optimality that embraces different domains of optimization, such as different permutations of a code or different codes with the same parameters, and we give examples of uniformly optimal codes and permutations. We also give some conditions that identify certain cases when no code or permutation can meet the bounds. In addition to DLP-based bounds, we derive new inequalities relating one complexity measure to another, which can be used in conjunction with known bounds on one measure to imply bounds on the others. As an application, we infer new bounds on maximum state and edge complexity and on total vertices and edges from bounds on span lengths
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