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  4. Linear Compressive Networks
 
conference paper

Linear Compressive Networks

Goela, Naveen
•
Gastpar, Michael  
2009
2009 Ieee International Symposium On Information Theory
IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory (ISIT 2009)

A linear compressive network (LCN) is defined as a graph of sensors in which each encoding sensor compresses incoming jointly Gaussian random signals and transmits (potentially) low-dimensional linear projections to neighbors over a noisy uncoded channel. Each sensor has a maximum power to allocate over signal subspaces. The networks of focus are acyclic, directed graphs with multiple sources and multiple destinations. LCN pathways lead to decoding leaf nodes that estimate linear functions of the original high dimensional sources by minimizing a mean squared error (MSE) distortion cost function. An iterative Optimization of local compressive matrices for all graph nodes is developed using an optimal quadratically constrained quadratic program (QCQP) step. The performance of the optimization is marked by power-compression-distortion spectra, with converse bounds based on cut-set arguments. Examples include single layer and multi-layer (e.g. p-layer tree cascades, butterfly) networks. The LCN is a generalization of the Karhunen-Loeve Transform to noisy multi-layer networks, and extends previous approaches for point-to-point and distributed compression-estimation of Gaussian signals. The framework relates to network coding in the noiseless case, and uncoded transmission in the noisy case.

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