• DocumentCode
    71098
  • Title

    Synthesis of Stochastic Flow Networks

  • Author

    Hongchao Zhou ; Ho-Lin Chen ; Bruck, Jehoshua

  • Author_Institution
    Res. Lab. of Electron., Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA, USA
  • Volume
    63
  • Issue
    5
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    May-14
  • Firstpage
    1234
  • Lastpage
    1247
  • Abstract
    A stochastic flow network is a directed graph with incoming edges (inputs) and outgoing edges (outputs), tokens enter through the input edges, travel stochastically in the network, and can exit the network through the output edges. Each node in the network is a splitter, namely, a token can enter a node through an incoming edge and exit on one of the output edges according to a predefined probability distribution. Stochastic flow networks can be easily implemented by beam splitters, or by DNA-based chemical reactions, with promising applications in optical computing, molecular computing and stochastic computing. In this paper, we address a fundamental synthesis question: Given a finite set of possible splitters and an arbitrary rational probability distribution, design a stochastic flow network, such that every token that enters the input edge will exit the outputs with the prescribed probability distribution. The problem of probability transformation dates back to von Neumann´s 1951 work and was followed, among others, by Knuth and Yao in 1976. Most existing works have been focusing on the “simulation” of target distributions. In this paper, we design optimal-sized stochastic flow networks for “synthesizing” target distributions. It shows that when each splitter has two outgoing edges and is unbiased, an arbitrary rational probability a/b with a ≤ b ≤ 2n can be realized by a stochastic flow network of size n that is optimal. Compared to the other stochastic systems, feedback (cycles in networks) strongly improves the expressibility of stochastic flow networks.
  • Keywords
    directed graphs; statistical distributions; stochastic processes; DNA-based chemical reactions; arbitrary rational probability distribution; beam splitters; directed graph; molecular computing; optical computing; optimal-sized stochastic flow networks; predefined probability distribution; random-walk graph; stochastic computing; stochastic flow network synthesis; Chemicals; Electronic mail; Markov processes; Probabilistic logic; Probability distribution; Stochastic systems; Probabilistic computation; probability transformer; random-walk graph; stochastic flow network;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Computers, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9340
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TC.2012.270
  • Filename
    6355919