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Locally Decodable Codes

144

Citations

24

References

2012

Year

Abstract

Locally decodable codes are a class of "error-correcting codes." Error-correcting codes help to ensure reliability when transmitting information over noisy channels. They allow a sender of a message to add redundancy to messages, encoding bit strings representing messages into longer bit strings called codewords, in a way that the message can still be recovered even if a certain fraction of the codeword bits are corrupted. Classical error-correcting codes however do not work well when one is working with massive messages, because their decoding time increases (at least) linearly with the length of the message. As a result in typical applications the message is first partitioned into small blocks, each of which is then encoded separately. Such encoding allows efficient random-access retrieval of the message, but yields poor noise resilience. Locally decodable codes are codes intended to address this seeming conflict between efficient retrievability and reliability. They are codes that simultaneously provide efficient random-access retrieval and high noise resilience by allowing reliable reconstruction of an arbitrary bit of the message from looking at only a small number of randomly chosen codeword bits. This review introduces and motivates locally decodable codes, and discusses the central results of the subject. In particular, local decodability comes at the price of certain loss in terms of code efficiency, and this review describes the currently known limits on the efficiency that is achievable.

References

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1998

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1999

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1993

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2008

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2010

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2000

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2008

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1992

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2003

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1986

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