Explicit Uniquely Decodable Codes for Space Bounded Channels That Achieve List-Decoding Capacity.

2020 
We consider codes for space bounded channels. This is a model for communication under noise that was introduced by Guruswami and Smith (J. ACM 2016) and lies between the Shannon (random) and Hamming (adversarial) models. In this model, a channel is a space bounded procedure that reads the codeword in one pass, and modifies at most a p fraction of the bits of the codeword. (1) Explicit uniquely decodable codes for space bounded channels: Our main result is that for every 0 ≤ p 0 and a uniquely decodable code with rate 1−H(p) for channels with space nδ. This code is explicit (meaning that encoding and decoding are in poly-time). This improves upon previous explicit codes by Guruswami and Smith, and Kopparty, Shaltiel and Silbak (FOCS 2019). Specifically, we obtain the same space and rate as earlier works, even though prior work gave only list-decodable codes (rather than uniquely decodable codes). (2) Complete characterization of the capacity of space bounded channels: Together with a result by Guruswami and Smith showing the impossibility of unique decoding for p ≥ 1/4, our techniques also give a complete characterization of the capacity R(p) of space n1−o(1) channels, specifically: For 0≤pp R(·) is not continuous at p=1/4. Our results are incomparable to recent work on casual channels (these are stronger channels that read the codeword in one pass, but there is no space restriction). The best known codes for casual channels, due to Chen, Jaggi and Langberg (STOC 2015), are shown to exist by the probabilistic method, and no explicit codes are known. A key new ingredient in our construction is a new notion of “evasiveness” of codes, which is concerned with whether a decoding algorithm rejects a word that is obtained when a channel induces few errors to a uniformly chosen (or pseudorandom) string. We use evasiveness (as well as several additional new ideas related to coding theory and pseudorandomness) to identify the “correct” message in the list obtained by previous list-decoding algorithms.
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