Publication

Scaling Exponent of List Decoders with Applications to Polar Codes

Abstract

Motivated by the significant performance gains which polar codes experience when they are decoded with successive cancellation list decoders, we study how the scaling exponent changes as a function of the list size L. In particular, we fix the block error probability P-e and we analyze the tradeoff between the blocklength N and the back-off from capacity C-R using scaling laws. By means of a Divide and Intersect procedure, we provide a lower bound on the error probability under MAP decoding with list size L for any binary-input memoryless output-symmetric channel and for any class of linear codes such that their minimum distance is unbounded as the blocklength grows large. We show that, although list decoding can significantly improve the involved constants, the scaling exponent itself, i.e., the speed at which capacity is approached, stays unaffected. This result applies in particular to polar codes, since their minimum distance tends to infinity as N increases. Some considerations are also pointed out for the genie-aided successive cancellation decoder when transmission takes place over the binary erasure channel.

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Related concepts (28)
Decoding methods
In coding theory, decoding is the process of translating received messages into codewords of a given code. There have been many common methods of mapping messages to codewords. These are often used to recover messages sent over a noisy channel, such as a binary symmetric channel. is considered a binary code with the length ; shall be elements of ; and is the distance between those elements. One may be given the message , then ideal observer decoding generates the codeword .
Binary symmetric channel
A binary symmetric channel (or BSCp) is a common communications channel model used in coding theory and information theory. In this model, a transmitter wishes to send a bit (a zero or a one), and the receiver will receive a bit. The bit will be "flipped" with a "crossover probability" of p, and otherwise is received correctly. This model can be applied to varied communication channels such as telephone lines or disk drive storage.
Block code
In coding theory, block codes are a large and important family of error-correcting codes that encode data in blocks. There is a vast number of examples for block codes, many of which have a wide range of practical applications. The abstract definition of block codes is conceptually useful because it allows coding theorists, mathematicians, and computer scientists to study the limitations of all block codes in a unified way.
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