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Decoding Noisy Messages: A Method That Just Shouldn’t Work

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

Abstract

This paper is about receiving text messages through a noisy and costly line. Because the line is noisy one needs redundancy, but because it is costly one can afford very little of it. I start by using well-known machinery for decoding noisy messages (compressed sensing), then I attempt to reduce the redundancy (using random projections), until I get to a point where I use more orthogonal vectors than the space dimension allows. Instead of grinding to a halt or spurting out noise, this method is still able to decode messages correctly or almost correctly. I have no idea why the method works: this is my first reason for writing this paper using a narrative instead of formal scientific style (the second one is that I am tired of writing semi-formal prose, and long for a change).

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationFields Institute Communications
PublisherSpringer
Pages149-165
Number of pages17
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2026

Publication series

NameFields Institute Communications
Volume91
ISSN (Print)1069-5265
ISSN (Electronic)2194-1564

Keywords

  • Random projections
  • Signal processing
  • Text compression

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