The Extraction and Complexity Limits of Graphical Models for Linear Codes

  • Authors:
  • T. R. Halford;K. M. Chugg

  • Affiliations:
  • TrellisWare Technol., Inc., San Diego, CA;-

  • Venue:
  • IEEE Transactions on Information Theory
  • Year:
  • 2008

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Abstract

Two broad classes of graphical modeling problems for codes can be identified in the literature: constructive and extractive problems. The former class of problems concern the construction of a graphical model in order to define a new code. The latter class of problems concern the extraction of a graphical model for a (fixed) given code. The design of a new low-density parity-check code for some given criteria (e.g., target block length and code rate) is an example of a constructive problem. The determination of a graphical model for a classical linear block code that implies a decoding algorithm with desired performance and complexity characteristics is an example of an extractive problem. This work focuses on extractive graphical model problems and aims to lay out some of the foundations of the theory of such problems for linear codes. The primary focus of this work is a study of the space of all graphical models for a (fixed) given code. The tradeoff between cyclic topology and complexity in this space is characterized via the introduction of a new bound: the forest-inducing cut-set bound (FI-CSB). The proposed bound provides a more precise characterization of this tradeoff than that which can be obtained using existing tools (e.g., the CSB) and can be viewed as a generalization of the square-root bound for tail-biting trellises to graphical models with arbitrary cyclic topologies. Searching the space of graphical models for a given code is then enabled by introducing a set of basic graphical model transformation operations that are shown to span this space. Finally, heuristics for extracting novel graphical models for linear block codes using these transformations are investigated.