16 research outputs found
Strong Coordination over Multi-hop Line Networks
We analyze the problem of strong coordination over a multi-hop line network
in which the node initiating the coordination is a terminal network node. We
assume that each node has access to a certain amount of randomness that is
local to the node, and that the nodes share some common randomness, which are
used together with explicit hop-by-hop communication to achieve strong
coordination. We derive the trade-offs among the required rates of
communication on the network links, the rates of local randomness available to
network nodes, and the rate of common randomness to realize strong
coordination. We present an achievable coding scheme built using multiple
layers of channel resolvability codes, and establish several settings in which
this scheme is proven to offer the best possible trade-offs.Comment: 35 pages, 9 Figures, 4 Tables. A part of this work were published in
the 2015 IEEE Information Theory Workshop, and a part was accepted for
publication in the 50th Annual Conference on Information Sciences and System
Secure Cascade Channel Synthesis
We consider the problem of generating correlated random variables in a
distributed fashion, where communication is constrained to a cascade network.
The first node in the cascade observes an i.i.d. sequence locally before
initiating communication along the cascade. All nodes share bits of common
randomness that are independent of . We consider secure synthesis - random
variables produced by the system appear to be appropriately correlated and
i.i.d. even to an eavesdropper who is cognizant of the communication
transmissions. We characterize the optimal tradeoff between the amount of
common randomness used and the required rates of communication. We find that
not only does common randomness help, its usage exceeds the communication rate
requirements. The most efficient scheme is based on a superposition codebook,
with the first node selecting messages for all downstream nodes. We also
provide a fleeting view of related problems, demonstrating how the optimal rate
region may shrink or expand.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Information Theor
Strong Coordination over Noisy Channels: Is Separation Sufficient?
We study the problem of strong coordination of actions of two agents and
that communicate over a noisy communication channel such that the actions
follow a given joint probability distribution. We propose two novel schemes for
this noisy strong coordination problem, and derive inner bounds for the
underlying strong coordination capacity region. The first scheme is a joint
coordination-channel coding scheme that utilizes the randomness provided by the
communication channel to reduce the local randomness required in generating the
action sequence at agent . The second scheme exploits separate coordination
and channel coding where local randomness is extracted from the channel after
decoding. Finally, we present an example in which the joint scheme is able to
outperform the separate scheme in terms of coordination rate.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures. An extended version of a paper accepted for the
IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory (ISIT), 201
Strong Coordination over Noisy Channels: Is Separation Sufficient?
We study the problem of strong coordination of actions of two agents and
that communicate over a noisy communication channel such that the actions
follow a given joint probability distribution. We propose two novel schemes for
this noisy strong coordination problem, and derive inner bounds for the
underlying strong coordination capacity region. The first scheme is a joint
coordination-channel coding scheme that utilizes the randomness provided by the
communication channel to reduce the local randomness required in generating the
action sequence at agent . The second scheme exploits separate coordination
and channel coding where local randomness is extracted from the channel after
decoding. Finally, we present an example in which the joint scheme is able to
outperform the separate scheme in terms of coordination rate.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures. An extended version of a paper accepted for the
IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory (ISIT), 201
Empirical and Strong Coordination via Soft Covering with Polar Codes
We design polar codes for empirical coordination and strong coordination in
two-node networks. Our constructions hinge on the fact that polar codes enable
explicit low-complexity schemes for soft covering. We leverage this property to
propose explicit and low-complexity coding schemes that achieve the capacity
regions of both empirical coordination and strong coordination for sequences of
actions taking value in an alphabet of prime cardinality. Our results improve
previously known polar coding schemes, which (i) were restricted to uniform
distributions and to actions obtained via binary symmetric channels for strong
coordination, (ii) required a non-negligible amount of common randomness for
empirical coordination, and (iii) assumed that the simulation of discrete
memoryless channels could be perfectly implemented. As a by-product of our
results, we obtain a polar coding scheme that achieves channel resolvability
for an arbitrary discrete memoryless channel whose input alphabet has prime
cardinality.Comment: 14 pages, two-column, 5 figures, accepted to IEEE Transactions on
Information Theor