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Journal ArticleDOI

Network information flow

TLDR
This work reveals that it is in general not optimal to regard the information to be multicast as a "fluid" which can simply be routed or replicated, and by employing coding at the nodes, which the work refers to as network coding, bandwidth can in general be saved.
Abstract
We introduce a new class of problems called network information flow which is inspired by computer network applications. Consider a point-to-point communication network on which a number of information sources are to be multicast to certain sets of destinations. We assume that the information sources are mutually independent. The problem is to characterize the admissible coding rate region. This model subsumes all previously studied models along the same line. We study the problem with one information source, and we have obtained a simple characterization of the admissible coding rate region. Our result can be regarded as the max-flow min-cut theorem for network information flow. Contrary to one's intuition, our work reveals that it is in general not optimal to regard the information to be multicast as a "fluid" which can simply be routed or replicated. Rather, by employing coding at the nodes, which we refer to as network coding, bandwidth can in general be saved. This finding may have significant impact on future design of switching systems.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

An adaptive network coded retransmission scheme for single-hop wireless multicast broadcast services

TL;DR: This paper proposes an adaptive scheme that maintains the highest bandwidth efficiency obtainable by both opportunistic and full network coding schemes in wireless MBS, and derives performance metrics for opportunistic network coding using random graph theory.
Journal ArticleDOI

On Broadcast Stability of Queue-Based Dynamic Network Coding Over Erasure Channels

TL;DR: The comparison of random and queue-based dynamic network coding with plain retransmissions opens up new questions regarding the tradeoffs of stable throughput, packet delay, overhead, and complexity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Network coding-based multipath routing for energy efficiency in wireless sensor networks

TL;DR: When network coding is combined with multipath routing, the number of required routes and the total times of transmission in sensor networks are reduced, which leads energy consumption of NCMR lower than that of traditional multipath routed, and this is proved by the theoretical analysis results.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Network Information Flow in Network of Queues

TL;DR: This work replaces each infinitely powerful node in the network with afinitely capacitied queue system instead and shows that the optimal routing problems for unicast, multiple unicasts and multicast can all be formulated as convex optimization problems.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Securing multi-antenna two-way relay channels with analog network coding against eavesdroppers

TL;DR: A new performance metric, namely the secrecy sum rate of the MIMO TWRC, is proposed, to quantify performance and secure transmission strategies for the scenarios of no eavesdropper channel state information at the transmitters and complete ECSIT are considered.
References
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Book

Elements of information theory

TL;DR: The author examines the role of entropy, inequality, and randomness in the design of codes and the construction of codes in the rapidly changing environment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Factor graphs and the sum-product algorithm

TL;DR: A generic message-passing algorithm, the sum-product algorithm, that operates in a factor graph, that computes-either exactly or approximately-various marginal functions derived from the global function.
Journal ArticleDOI

Noiseless coding of correlated information sources

TL;DR: The minimum number of bits per character R_X and R_Y needed to encode these sequences so that they can be faithfully reproduced under a variety of assumptions regarding the encoders and decoders is determined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Linear network coding

TL;DR: This work forms this multicast problem and proves that linear coding suffices to achieve the optimum, which is the max-flow from the source to each receiving node.
Journal ArticleDOI

Achievable rates for multiple descriptions

TL;DR: These rates are shown to be optimal for deterministic distortion measures for random variables and Shannon mutual information.
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