Distributed hypothesis testing with variable-length coding

Sadaf Salehkalaibar, Michèle Wigger

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The problem of distributed testing against independence with variable-length coding is considered when the average and not the maximum communication load is constrained as in previous works. The paper characterizes the optimum type-II error exponent of a single-sensor single-decision center system given a maximum type-I error probability when communication is either over a noise-free rate-R link or over a noisy discrete memoryless channel (DMC) with stop-feedback. Specifically, let ∈ denote the maximum allowed type-I error probability. Then the optimum exponent of the system with a rate-R link under a constraint on the average communication load coincides with the optimum exponent of such a system with a rate R/(1 -∈) link under a maximum communication load constraint. A strong converse thus does not hold under an average communication load constraint. A similar observation also holds for testing against independence over DMCs. With variable-length coding and stopfeedback and under an average communication load constraint, the optimum type-II error exponent over a DMC of capacity C equals the optimum exponent under fixed-length coding and a maximum communication load constraint when communication is over a DMC of capacity C/(1 -∈).

Original languageEnglish
Article number3039839
Pages (from-to)681-694
Number of pages14
JournalIEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Information Theory
Volume1
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2020
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Discrete memoryless channels
  • Distributed hypothesis testing
  • Strong converse
  • Variable-length coding

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