Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Notation
- 1 Introduction
- Part I Preliminaries
- Part II Single-Hop Networks
- 4 Multiple Access Channels
- 5 Degraded Broadcast Channels
- 6 Interference Channels
- 7 Channels with State
- 8 General Broadcast Channels
- 9 Gaussian Vector Channels
- 10 Distributed Lossless Compression
- 11 Lossy Compression with Side Information
- 12 Distributed Lossy Compression
- 13 Multiple Description Coding
- 14 Joint Source–Channel Coding
- Part III Multihop Networks
- Part IV Extensions
- Appendices
- Bibliography
- Common Symbols
- Author Index
- Subject Index
8 - General Broadcast Channels
from Part II - Single-Hop Networks
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Notation
- 1 Introduction
- Part I Preliminaries
- Part II Single-Hop Networks
- 4 Multiple Access Channels
- 5 Degraded Broadcast Channels
- 6 Interference Channels
- 7 Channels with State
- 8 General Broadcast Channels
- 9 Gaussian Vector Channels
- 10 Distributed Lossless Compression
- 11 Lossy Compression with Side Information
- 12 Distributed Lossy Compression
- 13 Multiple Description Coding
- 14 Joint Source–Channel Coding
- Part III Multihop Networks
- Part IV Extensions
- Appendices
- Bibliography
- Common Symbols
- Author Index
- Subject Index
Summary
We resume the discussion of broadcast channels started in Chapter 5. Again consider the 2-receiver DM-BCp(y1, y2|x) with private and common messages depicted in Figure 8.1. The definitions of a code, achievability, and capacity regions are the same as in Chapter 5. As mentioned before, the capacity region of the DM-BC is not known in general. In Chapter 5, we presented the superposition coding scheme and showed that it is optimal for several classes of channels in which one receiver is stronger than the other. In this chapter, we study coding schemes that can outperform superposition coding and present the tightest known inner and outer bounds on the capacity region of the general broadcast channel.
We first show that superposition coding is optimal for the 2-receiver DM-BC with degraded message sets, that is, when either R1 = 0 or R2 = 0. We then show that superposition coding is not optimal for BCs with more than two receivers. In particular, we establish the capacity region of the 3-receiver multilevel BC. The achievability proof involves the new idea of indirect decoding, whereby a receiver who wishes to recover only the common message still uses satellite codewords in decoding for the cloud center.
We then present Marton's inner bound on the private-message capacity region of the 2-receiver DM-BC and show that it is optimal for the class of semideterministic BCs. The coding scheme involves the multicoding technique introduced in Chapter 7 and the new idea of joint typicality codebook generation to construct dependent codewords for independent messages without the use of a superposition structure. The proof of the inner bound uses the mutual covering lemma, which is a generalization of the covering lemma in Section 3.7. Marton's coding scheme is then combined with superposition coding to establish an inner bound on the capacity region of the DM-BC that is tight for all classes of DM-BCs with known capacity regions. Next, we establish the Nair–El Gamal outer bound on the capacity region of the DM-BC. We show through an example that there is a gap between these inner and outer bounds. Finally, we discuss extensions of the aforementioned coding techniques to broadcast channels with more than two receivers and with arbitrary messaging requirements.
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- Network Information Theory , pp. 197 - 226Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011