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We study the problem of multicasting over a network of multiple-access channels (MACs). The separation-based solution to this problem is to reduce each MAC to a set of noiseless bit pipes via a channel code and,then employ network coding. Sometimes, however, the physical-layer structure of the MAC can be exploited more advantageously. In many cases of interest, the MAC output is a (deterministic) function of its inputs, corrupted by noise. We develop structured codes to exploit the natural function of a MAC to reliably compute functions as part of a network code and show that in many scenarios of interest our scheme outperforms the separation-based solution. If each MAC can be written as a sum over some finite field plus noise, then our achievable rate coincides with the max-flow min-cut bound.
Michael Christoph Gastpar, Sung Hoon Lim, Jingge Zhu, Erixhen Sula, Adriano Pastore
Michael Christoph Gastpar, Sung Hoon Lim, Jingge Zhu
Michael Christoph Gastpar, Sung Hoon Lim, Adriano Pastore, Chen Feng