Bounds On The Rate Of Superimposed Codes

2014 IEEE INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON INFORMATION THEORY (ISIT)(2014)

Cited 1|Views2
No score
Abstract
A binary code is called a superimposed cover-free (s, l)-code if the code is identified by the incidence matrix of a family of finite sets in which no intersection of l sets is covered by the union of s others. A binary code is called a superimposed list-decoding s(L)-code if the code is identified by the incidence matrix of a family of finite sets in which the union of any s sets can cover not more than L - 1 other sets of the family. For L = l = 1, both of the definitions coincide and the corresponding binary code is called a superimposed s-code. Our aim is to obtain new lower and upper bounds on the rate of the given codes. The most interesting result is a lower bound on the rate of superimposed cover-free (s, l)-codes based on the ensemble of constant weight binary codes. If the parameter l >= 1 is fixed and s --> infinity, then the ratio of this lower bound to the best known upper bound converges to the limit 2 e(-2) = 0.271. For the classical case l = 1 and s >= 2, the given statement means that the upper bound on the rate of superimposed s -codes obtained by A.G. Dyachkov and V.V. Rykov (1982) is asymptotically attained to within a constant factor a, 2 e(-2) <= a <= 1.
More
Translated text
Key words
bounds
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined