The Porosity of Additive Noise Sequences
Abstract
Consider a binary additive noise channel with noiseless feedback. When the noise is a stationary and ergodic process Z, the capacity is 1-H(Z) (H(·) denoting the entropy rate). It is shown analogously that when the noise is a deterministic sequence z∞, the capacity under finite-state encoding and decoding is 1-(z∞), where (·) is Lempel and Ziv's finite-state compressibility. This quantity is termed the porosity σ(·) of an individual noise sequence. A sequence of schemes are presented that universally achieve porosity for any noise sequence. These converse and achievability results may be interpreted both as a channel-coding counterpart to Ziv and Lempel's work in universal source coding, as well as an extension to the work by Lomnitz and Feder and Shayevitz and Feder on communication across modulo-additive channels. Additionally, a slightly more practical architecture is suggested that draws a connection with finite-state predictability, as introduced by Feder, Gutman, and Merhav.
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