419,344 research outputs found

    Two-dimensional burst identification codes and their use in burst correction

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    A new class of codes, called burst identification codes, is defined and studied. These codes can be used to determine the patterns of burst errors. Two-dimensional burst correcting codes can be easily constructed from burst identification codes. The resulting class of codes is simple to implement and has lower redundancy than other comparable codes. The results are pertinent to the study of radiation effects on VLSI RAM chips, which can cause two-dimensional bursts of errors

    Approximate Capacities of Two-Dimensional Codes by Spatial Mixing

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    We apply several state-of-the-art techniques developed in recent advances of counting algorithms and statistical physics to study the spatial mixing property of the two-dimensional codes arising from local hard (independent set) constraints, including: hard-square, hard-hexagon, read/write isolated memory (RWIM), and non-attacking kings (NAK). For these constraints, the strong spatial mixing would imply the existence of polynomial-time approximation scheme (PTAS) for computing the capacity. It was previously known for the hard-square constraint the existence of strong spatial mixing and PTAS. We show the existence of strong spatial mixing for hard-hexagon and RWIM constraints by establishing the strong spatial mixing along self-avoiding walks, and consequently we give PTAS for computing the capacities of these codes. We also show that for the NAK constraint, the strong spatial mixing does not hold along self-avoiding walks

    Optimal prefix codes for pairs of geometrically-distributed random variables

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    Optimal prefix codes are studied for pairs of independent, integer-valued symbols emitted by a source with a geometric probability distribution of parameter qq, 0<q<10{<}q{<}1. By encoding pairs of symbols, it is possible to reduce the redundancy penalty of symbol-by-symbol encoding, while preserving the simplicity of the encoding and decoding procedures typical of Golomb codes and their variants. It is shown that optimal codes for these so-called two-dimensional geometric distributions are \emph{singular}, in the sense that a prefix code that is optimal for one value of the parameter qq cannot be optimal for any other value of qq. This is in sharp contrast to the one-dimensional case, where codes are optimal for positive-length intervals of the parameter qq. Thus, in the two-dimensional case, it is infeasible to give a compact characterization of optimal codes for all values of the parameter qq, as was done in the one-dimensional case. Instead, optimal codes are characterized for a discrete sequence of values of qq that provide good coverage of the unit interval. Specifically, optimal prefix codes are described for q=2−1/kq=2^{-1/k} (k≄1k\ge 1), covering the range q≄1/2q\ge 1/2, and q=2−kq=2^{-k} (k>1k>1), covering the range q<1/2q<1/2. The described codes produce the expected reduction in redundancy with respect to the one-dimensional case, while maintaining low complexity coding operations.Comment: To appear in IEEE Transactions on Information Theor
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