Visible to the public Constant-rate Coding for Multiparty Interactive Communication is Impossible

TitleConstant-rate Coding for Multiparty Interactive Communication is Impossible
Publication TypeConference Paper
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsBraverman, Mark, Efremenko, Klim, Gelles, Ran, Haeupler, Bernhard
Conference NameProceedings of the Forty-eighth Annual ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing
PublisherACM
Conference LocationNew York, NY, USA
ISBN Number978-1-4503-4132-5
Keywordscoding theory, communication complexity, Computing Theory, Computing Theory and Resilience, Interactive communication, Network topology, pubcrawl, Rate, resilience, Resiliency, Stochastic noise
Abstract

We study coding schemes for multiparty interactive communication over synchronous networks that suffer from stochastic noise, where each bit is independently flipped with probability e. We analyze the minimal overhead that must be added by the coding scheme in order to succeed in performing the computation despite the noise. Our main result is a lower bound on the communication of any noise-resilient protocol over a synchronous star network with n-parties (where all parties communicate in every round). Specifically, we show a task that can be solved by communicating T bits over the noise-free network, but for which any protocol with success probability of 1-o(1) must communicate at least O(T log n / log log n) bits when the channels are noisy. By a 1994 result of Rajagopalan and Schulman, the slowdown we prove is the highest one can obtain on any topology, up to a log log n factor. We complete our lower bound with a matching coding scheme that achieves the same overhead; thus, the capacity of (synchronous) star networks is Th(log log n / log n). Our bounds prove that, despite several previous coding schemes with rate O(1) for certain topologies, no coding scheme with constant rate O(1) exists for arbitrary n-party noisy networks.

URLhttp://doi.acm.org/10.1145/2897518.2897563
DOI10.1145/2897518.2897563
Citation Keybraverman_constant-rate_2016