English

Can Negligible Cooperation Increase Network Reliability?

Information Theory 2016-11-17 v2 math.IT

Abstract

In network cooperation strategies, nodes work together with the aim of increasing transmission rates or reliability. This paper demonstrates that enabling cooperation between the transmitters of a two-user multiple access channel, via a cooperation facilitator that has access to both messages, always results in a network whose maximal- and average-error sum-capacities are the same---even when those capacities differ in the absence of cooperation and the information shared with the encoders is negligible. From this result, it follows that if a multiple access channel with no transmitter cooperation has different maximal- and average-error sum-capacities, then the maximal-error sum-capacity of the network consisting of this channel and a cooperation facilitator is not continuous with respect to the output edge capacities of the facilitator. This shows that there exist networks where sharing even a negligible number of bits per channel use with the encoders yields a non-negligible benefit.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1601.05769,
  title  = {Can Negligible Cooperation Increase Network Reliability?},
  author = {Parham Noorzad and Michelle Effros and Michael Langberg},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1601.05769},
  year   = {2016}
}

Comments

27 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to the IEEE Transactions on Information Theory

R2 v1 2026-06-22T12:34:25.479Z