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research article

To code or not to code: lossy source-channel communication revisited

Gastpar, Michael  
•
Rimoldi, Bixio  
•
Vetterli, Martin  
2003
IEEE Transactions on Information Theory

What makes a source–channel communication system optimal? It is shown that in order to achieve an optimal cost–distortion tradeoff, the source and the channel have to be matched in a probabilistic sense. The match (or lack of it) involves the source distribution, the distortion measure, the channel conditional distribution, and the channel input cost func- tion. Closed-form necessary and sufficient expressions relating the above entities are given. This generalizes both the separa- tion-based approach as well as the two well-known examples of optimal uncoded communication. The condition of probabilistic matching is extended to certain nonergodic and multiuser scenarios. This leads to a result on op- timal single-source broadcast communication.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1109/TIT.2003.810631
Web of Science ID

WOS:000182711200004

Author(s)
Gastpar, Michael  
Rimoldi, Bixio  
Vetterli, Martin  
Date Issued

2003

Published in
IEEE Transactions on Information Theory
Volume

49

Issue

5

Start page

1147

End page

1158

Subjects

NCCR-MICS/CL1

•

NCCR-MICS

•

joint source-channel coding

•

uncoded transmission

•

separation theorem

•

single-letter codes

•

single-source broadcast

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LCAV  
LCM  
LINX  
Available on Infoscience
April 18, 2005
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/212763
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