• DocumentCode
    1115657
  • Title

    An algorithm for computing the distance spectrum of trellis codes

  • Author

    Rouanne, M. ; Costello, D.J., Jr.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Notre Dame Univ., IN, USA
  • Volume
    7
  • Issue
    6
  • fYear
    1989
  • Firstpage
    929
  • Lastpage
    940
  • Abstract
    A class of quasiregular codesis defined for which the distance spectrum can be calculated from the codeword corresponding to the all-zero information sequence. Convolutional codes and regular codes are both quasiregular, as well as most of the best known trellis codes. An algorithm to compute the distance spectrum of linear, regular, and quasiregular trellis codes is presented. In particular, it can calculate the weight spectrum of convolutional (linear trellis) codes and the distance spectrum of most of the best known trellis codes. The codes do not have to be linear or regular, and the signals do not have to be used with equal probabilities. The algorithm is derived from a bidirectional stack algorithm, although it could also be based on the Viterbi algorithm. The algorithm is used to calculate the beginning of the distance spectrum of some of the best known trellis codes and to compute tight estimates on the first-event-error probability and on the bit-error probability.<>
  • Keywords
    codes; encoding; error statistics; Viterbi algorithm; all-zero information sequence; bidirectional stack algorithm; bit-error probability; codeword; convolutional codes; distance spectrum; first-event-error probability; linear codes; quasiregular codes; regular codes; trellis codes; weight spectrum; Computational modeling; Convolution; Convolutional codes; Error probability; Modulation coding; NASA; Signal to noise ratio; Source coding; Viterbi algorithm;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Selected Areas in Communications, IEEE Journal on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0733-8716
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/49.29615
  • Filename
    29615