• DocumentCode
    2182675
  • Title

    Identification is easier than decoding

  • Author

    Ja, Joseph Ja

  • fYear
    1985
  • fDate
    21-23 Oct. 1985
  • Firstpage
    43
  • Lastpage
    50
  • Abstract
    Several questions related to the complexity of communication over channels with noise are addressed. We compare some of our results to wellknown results in information theory. In particular we compare the following two problems. Assuming that the communication channel between two processors P1 and P2 makes an error with probability ε≫0, the identification problem is to determine whether P1 and P2 have the same n-bit integer. The decoding problem is for P2 to determine the n-bit integer of P1. For the latter problem we show that given any arbitrarily large constant λ≫0, there exists an ε, 0≪ε≪1/2, for which no scheme requiring less than λn bits of communication can guarantee (for large n) any bound q≪1 on the error probability. On the other hand, given any arbitrarily small constant γ≫0 and any ε, 0≪ε≪1/2, the identification problem can be solved with (1+γ)n bits of (one-way) communication with an error probability bounded by c2-αn, where c and α are positive constants. These techniques are extended to other problems, and a one-bit output Boolean function is shown to exhibit a similar behavior to that of the decoding problem regardless of how the input bits are partitioned among the two processors.
  • Keywords
    Boolean functions; Channel capacity; Communication channels; Complexity theory; Concurrent computing; Decoding; Distributed computing; Educational institutions; Error probability; Information theory;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Foundations of Computer Science, 1985., 26th Annual Symposium on
  • Conference_Location
    Portland, OR, USA
  • ISSN
    0272-5428
  • Print_ISBN
    0-8186-0644-4
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/SFCS.1985.32
  • Filename
    4568126