English

Optimal Sequential Frame Synchronization

Information Theory 2007-08-23 v1 math.IT

Abstract

We consider the `one-shot frame synchronization problem' where a decoder wants to locate a sync pattern at the output of a channel on the basis of sequential observations. We assume that the sync pattern of length N starts being emitted at a random time within some interval of size A, that characterizes the asynchronism level between the transmitter and the receiver. We show that a sequential decoder can optimally locate the sync pattern, i.e., exactly, without delay, and with probability approaching one as N tends to infinity, if and only if the asynchronism level grows as O(exp(N*k)), with k below the `synchronization threshold,' a constant that admits a simple expression depending on the channel. This constant is the same as the one that characterizes the limit for reliable asynchronous communication, as was recently reported by the authors. If k exceeds the synchronization threshold, any decoder, sequential or non-sequential, locates the sync pattern with an error that tends to one as N tends to infinity. Hence, a sequential decoder can locate a sync pattern as well as the (non-sequential) maximum likelihood decoder that operates on the basis of output sequences of maximum length A+N-1, but with much fewer observations.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0708.2911,
  title  = {Optimal Sequential Frame Synchronization},
  author = {Venkat Chandar and Aslan Tchamkerten and Gregory Wornell},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0708.2911},
  year   = {2007}
}

Comments

6 pages

R2 v1 2026-06-21T09:09:28.293Z