Distributed source coding using syndromes (DISCUS): design and construction
University of Michigan–Ann Arbor · University of California, Berkeley
Abstract
We address the problem of compressing correlated distributed sources, i.e., correlated sources which are not co-located or which cannot cooperate to directly exploit their correlation. We consider the related problem of compressing a source which is correlated with another source that is available only at the decoder. This problem has been studied in the information theory literature under the name of the Slepian-Wolf (1973) source coding problem for the lossless coding case, and as "rate-distortion with side information" for the lossy coding case. We provide a constructive practical framework based on algebraic trellis codes dubbed as DIstributed Source Coding Using Syndromes (DISCUS), that can be applicable…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 75.80
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 36
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Distributed source coding
- Source code
- Independent and identically distributed random variables
- Variable-length code
- Computer science
- Shannon–Fano coding
- Theoretical computer science
- Algorithm