Block Edit Errors with Transpositions: Deterministic Document Exchange Protocols and Almost Optimal Binary Codes
Abstract
Document exchange and error correcting codes are two fundamental problems regarding communications. In the first problem, Alice and Bob each holds a string, and the goal is for Alice to send a short sketch to Bob, so that Bob can recover Alice's string. In the second problem, Alice sends a message with some redundant information to Bob through a channel that can add adversarial errors, and the goal is for Bob to correctly recover the message despite the errors. In a recent work CJLW18, the authors constructed explicit deterministic document exchange protocols and binary error correcting codes for edit errors with almost optimal parameters.\ Unfortunately, the constructions in CJLW18 do not work for other common errors such as block transpositions. In this paper, we generalize the constructions in CJLW18 to handle a much larger class of errors. These include bursts of insertions and deletions, as well as block transpositions. Specifically, we consider document exchange and error correcting codes where the total number of block insertions, block deletions, and block transpositions is at most k ≤ α n/ n for some constant 0<α<1. In addition, the total number of bits inserted and deleted by the first two kinds of operations is at most t ≤ β n for some constant 0<β<1, where n is the length of Alice's string or message. We construct explicit, deterministic document exchange protocols with sketch size O( (k n +t) 2 nk n + t ) and explicit binary error correcting code with O(k n n+t) redundant bits.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.