On randomized linear network codes and their error correction capabilities

  • Authors:
  • Huseyin Balli;Xijin Yan;Zhen Zhang

  • Affiliations:
  • Electrical Engineering Department, University of Lefke, Cyprus;Bayview Asset Management, LLC, Miami, FL;Communication Sciences Institute, Department of Electrical Engineering-Systems, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA

  • Venue:
  • IEEE Transactions on Information Theory
  • Year:
  • 2009

Quantified Score

Hi-index 754.84

Visualization

Abstract

Randomized linear network code for single source multicast was introduced and analyzed in Ho et al. (IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, October 2006) where the main results are upper bounds for the failure probability of the code. In this paper, these bounds are improved and tightness of the new bounds is studied by analyzing the limiting behavior of the failure probability as the field size goes to infinity. In the linear random coding setting for single source multicast, the minimum distance of the code defined in Zhang, (IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, January 2008) is a random variable taking nonnegative integer values that satisfy the inequality in the Singleton bound recently established in Yeung and Cai (Communications in Information and Systems, 2006) for network error correction codes. We derive a bound on the probability mass function of the minimum distance of the random linear network code based on our improved upper bounds for the failure probability. Codes having the highest possible minimum distance in the Singleton bound are called maximum distance separable (MDS). The bound on the field size required for the existence of MDS codes reported in Zhang, (IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, January 2008) and Matsumoto (arXiv:cs.IT/0610121, Oct. 2006) suggests that such codes exist only when field size is large. Define the degradation of a code as the difference between the highest possible minimum distance in the Singleton bound and the actual minimum distance of the code. The bound for the probability mass function of the minimum distance leads to a bound on the field size required for the existence of network error correction codes with a given maximum degradation. The result shows that allowing minor degradation reduces the field size required dramatically.