Broadcasting a Common Message with Variable-Length Stop-Feedback Codes
Abstract
We investigate the maximum coding rate achievable over a two-user broadcast channel for the scenario where a common message is transmitted using variable-length stop-feedback codes. Specifically, upon decoding the common message, each decoder sends a stop signal to the encoder, which transmits continuously until it receives both stop signals. For the point-to-point case, Polyanskiy, Poor, and Verd\'u (2011) recently demonstrated that variable-length coding combined with stop feedback significantly increases the speed at which the maximum coding rate converges to capacity. This speed-up manifests itself in the absence of a square-root penalty in the asymptotic expansion of the maximum coding rate for large blocklengths, a result a.k.a. zero dispersion. In this paper, we show that this speed-up does not necessarily occur for the broadcast channel with common message. Specifically, there exist scenarios for which variable-length stop-feedback codes yield a positive dispersion.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1504.05940,
title = {Broadcasting a Common Message with Variable-Length Stop-Feedback Codes},
author = {Kasper Fløe Trillingsgaard and Wei Yang and Giuseppe Durisi and Petar Popovski},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1504.05940},
year = {2015}
}
Comments
Extended version of a paper submitted to ISIT 2015