Title :
Exploiting the cannibalistic traits of Reed-Solomon codes
fDate :
11/1/1995 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
In Reed-Solomon codes and all other maximum distance separable codes there is an intrinsic relationship between the size of the symbols in a codeword and the length of the codeword. Increasing the number of symbols in a codeword to improve the efficiency of the coding system thus requires using larger symbols. However, long Reed-Solomon codes are difficult to implement and many communications or storage systems cannot easily accommodate an increased symbol size, e.g., M-ary FSK and photon counting pulse position modulation demand a fixed symbol size. This paper describes a technique for sharing redundancy among many different Reed-Solomon codewords to achieve the efficiency attainable in long Reed-Solomon codes without increasing the symbol size. The paper presents techniques both for calculating the performance of these new codes and for determining their encoder and decoder complexities. These complexities are usually substantially lower than conventional Reed-Solomon codes of similar performance
Keywords :
Reed-Solomon codes; decoding; frequency shift keying; optical modulation; photon counting; pulse position modulation; M-ary FSK; Reed-Solomon codes; Reed-Solomon codewords; cannibalistic traits; codeword length; coding system efficiency; communications systems; decoder complexity; encoder complexity; fixed symbol size; long Reed-Solomon codes; maximum distance separable codes; performance; photon counting pulse position modulation; redundancy; storage systems; symbols size; Communications Society; Decoding; Error probability; Frequency shift keying; Information theory; Parity check codes; Redundancy; Reed-Solomon codes;
Journal_Title :
Communications, IEEE Transactions on