ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
We establish the deterministic-code capacity region of a network with one transmitter and two receivers: an ordinary receiver and a robust receiver. The channel to the ordinary receiver is a given (known) discrete memoryless channel (DMC), whereas the channel to the robust receiver is an arbitrarily varying channel (AVC). Both receivers are required to decode the common message, whereas only the ordinary receiver is required to decode the private message.
Two mobile users communicate with a central decoder via two base stations. Communication between the mobile users and the base stations takes place over a Gaussian interference channel with constant channel gains or quasi-static fading. Instead, the
The identification (ID) capacity region of the two-receiver broadcast channel (BC) is shown to be the set of rate-pairs for which, for some distribution on the channel input, each receivers ID rate does not exceed the mutual information between the c
The relay broadcast channel (RBC) is considered, in which a transmitter communicates with two receivers with the assistance of a relay. Based on different degradation orders among the relay and the receivers outputs, three types of physically degrade
In this paper, we study the problem of channel simulation via interactive communication, known as the coordination capacity, in a two-terminal network. We assume that two terminals observe i.i.d. copies of two random variables and would like to gener
In wireless data networks, communication is particularly susceptible to eavesdropping due to its broadcast nature. Security and privacy systems have become critical for wireless providers and enterprise networks. This paper considers the problem of s