This paper discusses a stylized communications problem where one wishes to
transmit a real-valued signal x in R^n (a block of n pieces of information) to
a remote receiver. We ask whether it is possible to transmit this information
reliably when a fraction of the transmitted codeword is corrupted by arbitrary
gross errors, and when in addition, all the entries of the codeword are
contaminated by smaller errors (e.g. quantization errors).
We show that if one encodes the information as Ax where A is a suitable m by
n coding matrix (m >= n), there are two decoding schemes that allow the
recovery of the block of n pieces of information x with nearly the same
accuracy as if no gross errors occur upon transmission (or equivalently as if
one has an oracle supplying perfect information about the sites and amplitudes
of the gross errors). Moreover, both decoding strategies are very concrete and
only involve solving simple convex optimization programs, either a linear
program or a second-order cone program. We complement our study with numerical
simulations showing that the encoder/decoder pair performs remarkably well.Comment: 23 pages, 2 figure