DocumentCode
1245249
Title
Simulation of random processes and rate-distortion theory
Author
Steinberg, Yossef ; Verdú, Sergio
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Ben-Gurion Univ. of the Negev, Beer-Sheva, Israel
Volume
42
Issue
1
fYear
1996
fDate
1/1/1996 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
63
Lastpage
86
Abstract
We study the randomness necessary for the simulation of a random process with given distributions, on terms of the finite-precision resolvability of the process. Finite-precision resolvability is defined as the minimal random-bit rate required by the simulator as a function of the accuracy with which the distributions are replicated. The accuracy is quantified by means of various measures: variational distance, divergence, Orstein (1973), Prohorov (1956) and related measures of distance between the distributions of random process. In the case of Ornstein, Prohorov and other distances of the Kantorovich-Vasershtein type, we show that the finite-precision resolvability is equal to the rate-distortion function with a fidelity criterion derived from the accuracy measure. This connection leads to new results on nonstationary rate-distortion theory. In the case of variational distance, the resolvability of stationary ergodic processes is shown to equal entropy rate regardless of the allowed accuracy. In the case of normalized divergence, explicit expressions for finite-precision resolvability are obtained in many cases of interest; and connections with data compression with minimum probability of block error are shown
Keywords
data compression; entropy; error statistics; probability; random processes; rate distortion theory; simulation; statistical analysis; Kantorovich-Vasershtein distance; Ornstein measure; Prohorov measure; accuracy measure; data compression; distance measure; distributions; entropy rate; finite precision resolvability; minimal random bit rate; minimum block error probability; nonstationary rate distortion theory; normalized divergence; random processes simulation; rate distortion function; rate distortion theory; stationary ergodic processes; variational distance; Approximation error; Convergence; Data compression; Entropy; Helium; Noise generators; Random number generation; Random processes; Rate-distortion; Speech synthesis;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Information Theory, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9448
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/18.481779
Filename
481779
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