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Data Compression Conference (DCC'05)
Towards Practical Minimum-Entropy Universal Decoding
Snowbird, Utah
March 29-March 31
ISBN: 0-7695-2309-9
Todd P. Coleman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Muriel M?dard, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Michelle Effros, California Institute of Technology
Minimum-entropy decoding is a universal decoding algorithm used in decoding block compression of discrete memoryless sources as well as block transmission of information across discrete memoryless channels. Extensions can also be applied for multiterminal decoding problems, such as the Slepian-Wolf source coding problem. The 'method of types' has been used to show that there exist linear codes for which minimum-entropy decoders achieve the same error exponent as maximum-likelihood decoders. Since minimum-entropy decoding is NP-hard in general, minimum-entropy decoders have existed primarily in the theory literature. We introduce practical approximation algorithms for minimum-entropy decoding. Our approach, which relies on ideas from linear programming, exploits two key observations. First, the 'method of types' shows that that the number of distinct types grows polynomially in n. Second, recent results in the optimization literature have illustrated polytope projection algorithms with complexity that is a function of the number of vertices of the projected polytope. Combining these two ideas, we leverage recent results on linear programming relaxations for error correcting codes to construct polynomial complexity algorithms for this setting. In the binary case, we explicitly demonstrate linear code constructions that admit provably good performance.
Citation:
Todd P. Coleman, Muriel M?dard, Michelle Effros, "Towards Practical Minimum-Entropy Universal Decoding," dcc, pp.33-42, Data Compression Conference (DCC'05), 2005
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