
Near-Capacity Variable-Length Coding
Regular and EXIT-Chart-Aided Irregular Designs
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Near-Capacity Variable-Length Coding examines the topic in the context of digital multimedia broadcast telecommunications. Providing insight into VLC coding's applications, characteristics and performance, the book addresses the latest research in the area. Using novel experiments, it systematically introduces Irregular Variable Length Coding (IrVLC), its function in joint source and channel coding, employment to facilitate Unequal Error Protection (UEP) and application to near-capacity operation using Extrinsic Information Transfer (EXIT) chart analysis. Having introduced the topic thoroughly, the mid section is devoted to the authors' latest techniques, outlining and explaining concepts such as Genetic Algorithm (GA), constructing both RVLCs and VLEC codes and EXIT modules. The book concludes with a chapter on future work on the topic.
Recent developments such as the invention of powerful turbo-decoding and irregular designs, together with the increase in the number of potential applications to multimedia signal compression, have increased the importance of variable length coding (VLC). Providing insights into the very latest research, the authors examine the design of diverse near-capacity VLC codes in the context of wireless telecommunications. The book commences with an introduction to Information Theory, followed by a discussion of Regular as well as Irregular Variable Length Coding and their applications in joint source and channel coding. Near-capacity designs are created using Extrinsic Information Transfer (EXIT) chart analysis. The latest techniques are discussed, outlining radical concepts such as Genetic Algorithm (GA) aided construction of diverse VLC codes. The book concludes with two chapters on VLC-based space-time transceivers as well as on frequency-hopping assisted schemes, followed by suggestions for future work on the topic. * Surveys the historic evolution and development of VLCs * Discusses the very latest research into VLC codes * Introduces the novel concept of Irregular VLCs and their application in joint-source and channel coding