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Article
Sum-networks from incidence structures: construction and capacity analysis
arXiv
  • Ardhendu Tripathy, Iowa State University
  • Aditya Ramamoorthy, Iowa State University
Document Type
Article
Publication Version
Submitted Manuscript
Publication Date
11-7-2016
Abstract

A sum-network is an instance of a network coding problem over a directed acyclic network in which each terminal node wants to compute the sum over a finite field of the information observed at all the source nodes. Many characteristics of the well-studied multiple unicast network communication problem also hold for sum-networks due to a known reduction between instances of these two problems. In this work, we describe an algorithm to construct families of sum-network instances using incidence structures. The computation capacity of several of these sum-network families is characterized. We demonstrate that unlike the multiple unicast problem, the computation capacity of sum-networks depends on the characteristic of the finite field over which the sum is computed. This dependence is very strong; we show examples of sum-networks that have a rate-1 solution over one characteristic but a rate close to zero over a different characteristic. Additionally, a sum-network can have an arbitrary different number of computation capacities for different alphabets. This is contrast to the multiple unicast problem where it is known that the capacity is independent of the network coding alphabet.

Copyright Owner
The authors
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
Ardhendu Tripathy and Aditya Ramamoorthy. "Sum-networks from incidence structures: construction and capacity analysis" arXiv Vol. Cs.IT (2016) p. 1611.01887
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/aditya-ramamoorthy/6/