Jump to content

Joint source and channel coding

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In information theory, joint source–channel coding is the encoding of a redundant information source for transmission over a noisy channel, and the corresponding decoding, using a single code instead of the more conventional steps of source coding followed by channel coding.

Joint source–channel coding has been proposed and implemented for a variety of situations, including speech and videotransmission.[1][2]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ M. R. Soleymani & A. K. Khandani (1991). "Vector Trellis Quantization for Noisy Channels". In Bishnu S. Atal; Vladimir Cuperman & Allen Gersho (eds.). Advances in Speech Coding. Springer. doi:10.1007/978-1-4615-3266-8_26. ISBN 0-7923-9091-1.
  2. ^ Martin Vetterli & Kamil Metin Uz (1992). "Multiresolution Coding Techniques for Digital Television: A Review". In Giovanni L. Sicuranza & Sanjit K. Mitra (eds.). Multidimensional processing of video signals (PDF). Springer. doi:10.1007/978-1-4615-3616-1_4. ISBN 0-7923-9228-0.