6,121 research outputs found
Coding Theory and Algebraic Combinatorics
This chapter introduces and elaborates on the fruitful interplay of coding
theory and algebraic combinatorics, with most of the focus on the interaction
of codes with combinatorial designs, finite geometries, simple groups, sphere
packings, kissing numbers, lattices, and association schemes. In particular,
special interest is devoted to the relationship between codes and combinatorial
designs. We describe and recapitulate important results in the development of
the state of the art. In addition, we give illustrative examples and
constructions, and highlight recent advances. Finally, we provide a collection
of significant open problems and challenges concerning future research.Comment: 33 pages; handbook chapter, to appear in: "Selected Topics in
Information and Coding Theory", ed. by I. Woungang et al., World Scientific,
Singapore, 201
Invariants of Combinatorial Line Arrangements and Rybnikov's Example
Following the general strategy proposed by G.Rybnikov, we present a proof of
his well-known result, that is, the existence of two arrangements of lines
having the same combinatorial type, but non-isomorphic fundamental groups. To
do so, the Alexander Invariant and certain invariants of combinatorial line
arrangements are presented and developed for combinatorics with only double and
triple points. This is part of a more general project to better understand the
relationship between topology and combinatorics of line arrangements.Comment: 27 pages, 2 eps figure
An Incidence Geometry approach to Dictionary Learning
We study the Dictionary Learning (aka Sparse Coding) problem of obtaining a
sparse representation of data points, by learning \emph{dictionary vectors}
upon which the data points can be written as sparse linear combinations. We
view this problem from a geometry perspective as the spanning set of a subspace
arrangement, and focus on understanding the case when the underlying hypergraph
of the subspace arrangement is specified. For this Fitted Dictionary Learning
problem, we completely characterize the combinatorics of the associated
subspace arrangements (i.e.\ their underlying hypergraphs). Specifically, a
combinatorial rigidity-type theorem is proven for a type of geometric incidence
system. The theorem characterizes the hypergraphs of subspace arrangements that
generically yield (a) at least one dictionary (b) a locally unique dictionary
(i.e.\ at most a finite number of isolated dictionaries) of the specified size.
We are unaware of prior application of combinatorial rigidity techniques in the
setting of Dictionary Learning, or even in machine learning. We also provide a
systematic classification of problems related to Dictionary Learning together
with various algorithms, their assumptions and performance
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
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