Reed–Muller code

Reed-Muller code RM(r,m)
Named after Irving S. Reed and David E. Muller
Classification
Type Linear block code
Parameters
Block length 2^m
Message length k=\sum_{i=0}^r \binom{m}{i}
Rate k/2^m
Distance 2^{m-r}
Alphabet size 2
Notation [2^m,k,2^{m-r}]_2

Reed–Muller codes are a family of linear error-correcting codes used in communications. Reed–Muller codes belong to the classes of locally testable codes and locally decodable codes, which is why they are useful in the design of probabilistically checkable proofs in computational complexity theory. They are named after Irving S. Reed and David E. Muller. Muller discovered the codes, and Reed proposed the majority logic decoding for the first time. Special cases of Reed–Muller codes include the Hadamard code, the Walsh–Hadamard code, and the Reed–Solomon code.

Reed–Muller codes are listed as RM(d, r), where d is the order of the code, and r determines the length of code, n = 2 r. RM codes are related to binary functions on the field GF(2 r) over the elements {0, 1}.

RM(0, r) codes are repetition codes of length n = 2 r, rate {R=\tfrac{1}{n}} and minimum distance dmin = n.

RM(1, r) codes are parity check codes of length n = 2 r, rate R=\tfrac{r+1}{n} and minimum distance d_\min = \tfrac{n}{2}.

RM(r  1, r) codes are parity check codes of length n = 2 r.

RM(r  2, r) codes are the family of extended Hamming codes of length n = 2 r with minimum distance dmin = 4.[1]

Construction

A generator matrix for a ReedMuller code of length n = 2d can be constructed as follows. Let us write:

 X = \mathbb{F}_2^d = \{ x_1, \ldots, x_{2^d} \}.

Note that each member of the set X is a point in \mathbb{F}_2^d. We define in n-dimensional space \mathbb{F}_2^n the indicator vectors

\mathbb{I}_A \in \mathbb{F}_2^n

on subsets  A \subset X by:

\left( \mathbb{I}_A \right)_i = \begin{cases} 1 & \mbox{ if } x_i \in A \\ 0 & \mbox{ otherwise} \\ \end{cases}

together with, also in \mathbb{F}_2^n, the binary operation

 w \wedge z = (w_1 \cdot z_1, \ldots , w_n \cdot z_n ),

referred to as the wedge product (this wedge product is not to be confused with the wedge product defined in exterior algebra). Here, w=(w_1,w_2,\ldots,w_n) and z=(z_1,z_2,\ldots, z_n) are points in \mathbb{F}_2^n, and the operation \cdot is the usual multiplication in the field \mathbb{F}_2.

\mathbb{F}_2^d is a d-dimensional vector space over the field \mathbb{F}_2, so it is possible to write

(\mathbb{F}_2)^d = \{ (y_d, \ldots , y_1) | y_i \in \mathbb{F}_2 \}

We define in n-dimensional space \mathbb{F}_2^n the following vectors with length n: v0 = (1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1) and

 v_i = \mathbb{I}_{ H_i }

where the Hi are hyperplanes in (\mathbb{F}_2)^d (with dimension d 1):

H_i = \{ y \in ( \mathbb{F}_2 ) ^d \mid y_i = 0 \}

Building a generator matrix

The ReedMuller RM(d, r) code of order d and length n = 2r is the code generated by v0 and the wedge products of up to r of the vi (where by convention a wedge product of fewer than one vector is the identity for the operation). In other words, we can build a generator matrix for RM(d,r) code, using vectors and their wedge product permutations up to the r at a time {v_0, v_1, \ldots, v_d, \ldots, (v_i \wedge v_j), \ldots (v_i \wedge v_j \ldots \wedge v_r)}, as the rows of the generator matrix.

Example 1

Let m = 3. Then n = 8, and

 X = \mathbb{F}_2^3 = \{ (0,0,0), (0,0,1),  \ldots, (1,1,1) \},

and


\begin{matrix}
v_0 & = & (1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1) \\[2pt]
v_1 & = & (1,0,1,0,1,0,1,0) \\[2pt]
v_2 & = & (1,1,0,0,1,1,0,0) \\[2pt]
v_3 & = & (1,1,1,1,0,0,0,0). \\
\end{matrix}

The RM(1,3) code is generated by the set

 \{ v_0, v_1, v_2, v_3 \},\,

or more explicitly by the rows of the matrix


\begin{pmatrix}
1 & 1 & 1 & 1 & 1 & 1 & 1 & 1 \\
1 & 0 & 1 & 0 & 1 & 0 & 1 & 0 \\
1 & 1 & 0 & 0 & 1 & 1 & 0 & 0 \\
1 & 1 & 1 & 1 & 0 & 0 & 0 & 0 \\
\end{pmatrix}

Example 2

The RM(2,3) code is generated by the set:

 \{ v_0, v_1, v_2, v_3, v_1 \wedge v_2, v_1 \wedge v_3, v_2 \wedge v_3 \}

or more explicitly by the rows of the matrix:


\begin{pmatrix}
1 & 1 & 1 & 1 & 1 & 1 & 1 & 1 \\
1 & 0 & 1 & 0 & 1 & 0 & 1 & 0 \\
1 & 1 & 0 & 0 & 1 & 1 & 0 & 0 \\
1 & 1 & 1 & 1 & 0 & 0 & 0 & 0 \\
1 & 0 & 0 & 0 & 1 & 0 & 0 & 0 \\
1 & 0 & 1 & 0 & 0 & 0 & 0 & 0 \\
1 & 1 & 0 & 0 & 0 & 0 & 0 & 0 \\
\end{pmatrix}

Properties

The following properties hold:

1 The set of all possible wedge products of up to d of the vi form a basis for \mathbb{F}_2^n.

2 The RM(d, r) code has rank

 \sum_{s=0}^r {d \choose s}.

3 RM(d, r) = RM(d 1, r ) | RM(d 1, r 1) where '|' denotes the bar product of two codes.

4 RM(d, r) has minimum Hamming weight 2r d.

Proof

1

There are
 \sum_{s=0}^d { d \choose s } = 2^d = n
such vectors and \mathbb{F}_2^n has dimension n so it is sufficient to check that the n vectors span; equivalently it is sufficient to check that RM(d, d) = \mathbb{F}_2^n.
Let x be an element of X and define
y_i = \begin{cases} v_i & \mbox{ if } x_i = 0 \\ 1+v_i & \mbox{ if } x_i = 1 \\ \end{cases}
Then \mathbb{I}_{ \{ x \} } = y_i \wedge \ldots \wedge y_d
Expansion via the distributivity of the wedge product gives  \mathbb{I}_{ \{ x \} } \in \mbox{ RM(d,d)} . Then since the vectors \{ \mathbb{I}_{ \{ x \} } \mid x \in X \} span \mathbb{F}_2^n we have RM(d, d) = \mathbb{F}_2^n.

2

By 1, all such wedge products must be linearly independent, so the rank of RM(d, r) must simply be the number of such vectors.

3

Omitted.

4

By induction.
The RM(d, 0) code is the repetition code of length n =2d and weight n = 2d0 = 2d0. By 1 RM(d, d) = \mathbb{F}_2^n and has weight 1 = 20 = 2dd.
The article bar product (coding theory) gives a proof that the weight of the bar product of two codes C1 , C2 is given by
\min \{ 2w(C_1), w(C_2) \}
If 0 < r < d and if
i) RM(d  1, r) has weight 2d1r
ii) RM(d-1,r-1) has weight 2d1(r1) = 2dr
then the bar product has weight
\min \{ 2 \times 2^{d-1-r}, 2^{d-r} \} = 2^{d-r} .

Alternative construction

A Reed–Muller code RM(r,m) exists for any integers m \ge 0 and 0 \le r \le m. RM(m, m) is defined as the universe (2^m,2^m,1) code. RM(1,m) is defined as the trivial code (2^m,0,\infty). The remaining RM codes may be constructed from these elementary codes using the length-doubling construction

RM(r,m) = \{(\mathbf{u},\mathbf{u}+\mathbf{v})|\mathbf{u} \in RM(r,m-1),\mathbf{v} \in RM(r-1,m-1)\}.

From this construction, RM(r,m) is a binary linear block code (n, k, d) with length n = 2 m, dimension k(r,m)=k(r,m-1)+k(r-1,m-1) and minimum distance d = 2^{m-r} for r \ge 0. The dual code to RM(r,m) is RM(m-r-1,m). This shows that repetition and SPC codes are duals, biorthogonal and extended Hamming codes are duals and that codes with k=n/2 are self-dual.

Construction based on low-degree polynomials over a finite field

There is another, simple way to construct Reed–Muller codes based on low-degree polynomials over a finite field. This construction is particularly suited for their application as locally testable codes and locally decodable codes.[2]

Let \mathbb F be a finite field and let m and d be positive integers, where m should be thought of as larger than d. We are going to encode messages consisting of {m+d \choose m} elements of \mathbb F as codewords of length |\mathbb F|^m as follows: We interpret the message as an m-variate polynomial f of degree at most d with coefficient from \mathbb F. Such a polynomial has {m+d \choose m} coefficients. The Reed–Muller encoding of f is the list of the evaluations of f on all x\in\mathbb F^m; the codeword at the position indexed by x\in\mathbb F^m has value f(x).

Table of ReedMuller codes

The table below lists the RM(r, m) codes of lengths up to 32.

RM(m,m)
(2^m,2^m,1)
universe codes
RM(5,5)
(32,32,1)
RM(4,4)
(16,16,1)
RM(m  1, m)
(2^m,2^m-1,2)
SPC codes
RM(3,3)
(8,8,1)
RM(4,5)
(32,31,2)
RM(2,2)
(4,4,1)
RM(3,4)
(16,15,2)
RM(m  2, m)
(2^m,2^m-m-1,4)
ext. Hamming codes
RM(1,1)
(2,2,1)
RM(2,3)
(8,7,2)
RM(3,5)
(32,26,4)
RM(0,0)
(1,1,1)
RM(1,2)
(4,3,2)
RM(2,4)
(16,11,4)
RM(0,1)
(2,1,2)
RM(1,3)
(8,4,4)
RM(2,5)
(32,16,8)
self-dual codes
RM(1,0)
(1,0,\infty)
RM(0,2)
(4,1,4)
RM(1,4)
(16,5,8)
RM(-1,1)
(2,0,\infty)
RM(0,3)
(8,1,8)
RM(1,5)
(32,6,16)
RM(-1,2)
(4,0,\infty)
RM(0,4)
(16,1,16)
RM(1,m)
(2^m,m+1,2^{m-1})
biorthogonal codes
RM(1,3)
(8,0,\infty)
RM(0,5)
(32,1,32)
RM(1,4)
(16,0,\infty)
RM(0,m)
(2^m, 1, 2^m)
repetition codes
RM(1,5)
(32,0,\infty)
RM(-1,m)
(2^m,0,\infty)
trivial codes

Decoding RM codes

RM(r, m) codes can be decoded using majority logic decoding. The basic idea of majority logic decoding is to build several checksums for each received code word element. Since each of the different checksums must all have the same value (i.e. the value of the message word element weight), we can use a majority logic decoding to decipher the value of the message word element. Once each order of the polynomial is decoded, the received word is modified accordingly by removing the corresponding codewords weighted by the decoded message contributions, up to the present stage. So for a rth order RM code, we have to decode iteratively r+1, times before we arrive at the final received code-word. Also, the values of the message bits are calculated through this scheme; finally we can calculate the codeword by multiplying the message word (just decoded) with the generator matrix.

One clue if the decoding succeeded, is to have an all-zero modified received word, at the end of (r + 1)-stage decoding through the majority logic decoding. This technique was proposed by Irving S. Reed, and is more general when applied to other finite geometry codes.

Notes

  1. Trellis and Turbo Coding, C. Schlegel & L. Perez, Wiley Interscience, 2004, p149.
  2. Prahladh Harsha et al., Limits of Approximation Algorithms: PCPs and Unique Games (DIMACS Tutorial Lecture Notes), Section 5.2.1.

References

Research Articles:

Textbooks:

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, April 30, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.