Robust parent-identifying codes and combinatorial arrays

Abstract

An nn-word yy over a finite alphabet of cardinality qq is called a descendant of a set of tt words x1,,xtx^1,\dots,x^t if yi{xi1,,xit}y_i\in\{x^1_i,\dots,x^t_i\} for all i=1,,n.i=1,\dots,n. A code \cC=\{x^1,\dots,x^M\} is said to have the tt-IPP property if for any nn-word yy that is a descendant of at most tt parents belonging to the code it is possible to identify at least one of them. From earlier works it is known that tt-IPP codes of positive rate exist if and only if tq1t\le q-1. We introduce a robust version of IPP codes which allows {unconditional} identification of parents even if some of the coordinates in yy can break away from the descent rule, i.e., can take arbitrary values from the alphabet, or become completely unreadable. We show existence of robust tt-IPP codes for all tq1t\le q-1 and some positive proportion of such coordinates. The proofs involve relations between IPP codes and combinatorial arrays with separating properties such as perfect hash functions and hash codes, partially hashing families and separating codes. For t=2t=2 we find the exact proportion of mutant coordinates (for several error scenarios) that permits unconditional identification of parents

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