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Continuous error detection (CED) for reliable communication
51
Citations
12
References
2001
Year
EngineeringError Control TechniqueVerificationComputer ArchitectureIterative DecodingError Detection TechniquesFormal VerificationHardware SecurityError DetectionReliability EngineeringJoint Source-channel CodingSystems EngineeringFailure DetectionError CorrectionReliabilityComputer EngineeringComputer ScienceError Correction CodeSignal ProcessingReliable CommunicationContinuous Error DetectionFec Frameworks
Block cyclic redundancy check (CRC) codes represent a popular and powerful class of error detection techniques used almost exclusively in modern data communication systems. Though efficient, CRCs can detect errors only after an entire block of data has been received and processed. In this work, we exploit the "continuous" nature of error detection that results from using arithmetic codes for error detection, which provides a novel tradeoff between the amount of added redundancy and the amount of time needed to detect an error once it occurs. We demonstrate how this continuous error detection framework improves the overall performance of communication systems, and show how considerable performance gains can be attained. We focus on several important scenarios: 1) automatic repeat request (ARQ) based transmission; 2) forward error correction (FEC frameworks based on (serially) concatenated coding systems involving an inner error-correction code and an outer error-detection code; and 3) reduced state sequence estimation (RSSE) for channels with memory. We demonstrate that the proposed CED framework improves the throughput of ARQ systems by up to 15% and reduces the computational/storage complexity of FEC and RSSE by a factor of two in the comparisons that we make against state-of-the-art systems.
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