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Locally Decodable Index Codes

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 14:21 authored by Lakshmi Natarajan, Prasad Krishnan, V Lalitha, Son Hoang DauSon Hoang Dau
An index code for broadcast channel with receiver side information is locally decodable if each receiver can decode its demand by observing only a subset of the transmitted codeword symbols instead of the entire codeword. Local decodability in index coding is known to reduce receiver complexity, improve user privacy and decrease decoding error probability in wireless fading channels. Conventional index coding solutions assume that the receivers observe the entire codeword, and as a result, for these codes the number of codeword symbols queried by a user per decoded message symbol, which we refer to as locality, could be large. In this paper, we pose the index coding problem as that of minimizing the broadcast rate for a given value of locality (or vice versa) and designing codes that achieve the optimal trade-off between locality and rate. We identify the optimal broadcast rate corresponding to the minimum possible value of locality for all single unicast problems. We present new structural properties of index codes which allow us to characterize the optimal trade-off achieved by: vector linear codes when the side information graph is a directed cycle; and scalar linear codes when the minrank of the side information graph is one less than the order of the problem. We also identify the optimal trade-off among all codes, including non-linear codes, when the side information graph is a directed 3-cycle. Finally, we present techniques to design locally decodable index codes for arbitrary single unicast problems and arbitrary values of locality.

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1109/TIT.2020.3015516
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 15579654

Journal

IEEE Transactions on Information Theory

Volume

66

Issue

12

Start page

7387

End page

7407

Total pages

21

Publisher

IEEE

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2020 IEEE

Former Identifier

2006101881

Esploro creation date

2021-06-01