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Extrinsic Jensen-Shannon divergence: Applications to variable-length coding

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Abstract

This paper considers the problem of variable-length coding over a discrete memoryless channel with noiseless feedback. This paper provides a stochastic control view of the problem whose solution is analyzed via a newly proposed symmetrized divergence, termed extrinsic Jensen-Shannon (EJS) divergence. It is shown that strictly positive lower bounds on EJS divergence provide nonasymptotic upper bounds on the expected code length. This paper presents strictly positive lower bounds on EJS divergence, and hence nonasymptotic upper bounds on the expected code length, for the following two coding schemes: 1) variable-length posterior matching and 2) MaxEJS coding scheme that is based on a greedy maximization of the EJS divergence. As an asymptotic corollary of the main results, this paper also provides a rate-reliability test. Variable-length coding schemes that satisfy the condition(s) of the test for parameters R and E are guaranteed to achieve a rate R and an error exponent E. The results are specialized for posterior matching and MaxEJS to obtain deterministic one-phase coding schemes achieving capacity and optimal error exponent. For the special case of symmetric binary-input channels, simpler deterministic schemes of optimal performance are proposed and analyzed.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2148-2164
Number of pages17
JournalIEEE Transactions on Information Theory
Volume61
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Apr 2015

Keywords

  • Burnashev's reliability function
  • Discrete memoryless channel
  • feedback gain
  • optimal error exponent
  • sequential analysis
  • variable-length coding

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