1,659 research outputs found
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
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
Coding Schemes for Achieving Strong Secrecy at Negligible Cost
We study the problem of achieving strong secrecy over wiretap channels at
negligible cost, in the sense of maintaining the overall communication rate of
the same channel without secrecy constraints. Specifically, we propose and
analyze two source-channel coding architectures, in which secrecy is achieved
by multiplexing public and confidential messages. In both cases, our main
contribution is to show that secrecy can be achieved without compromising
communication rate and by requiring only randomness of asymptotically vanishing
rate. Our first source-channel coding architecture relies on a modified wiretap
channel code, in which randomization is performed using the output of a source
code. In contrast, our second architecture relies on a standard wiretap code
combined with a modified source code termed uniform compression code, in which
a small shared secret seed is used to enhance the uniformity of the source code
output. We carry out a detailed analysis of uniform compression codes and
characterize the optimal size of the shared seed.Comment: 15 pages, two-column, 5 figures, accepted to IEEE Transactions on
Information Theor
Flexible Marketing and Outreach: An Institutional Repository Case Study
Librarians at Duquesne University did a soft rollout of their institutional repository in 2016, with a full rollout planned for 2017. Elsevier\u27s acquisition of Digital Commons prompted a reevaluation of the marketing plan. The Outreach & Communications Librarian, Digital Scholarship Librarian, and Systems Librarian approached this problem collaboratively to craft (and rebrand) a marketing message
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