Communication in “natural ” settings, e.g., between humans, is distinctly different than that in classical designed settings, in that the former is characterized by the sender and receiver not being in perfect agreement with each other. Solutions to classical communication problems thus have to overcome an extra layer of uncertainty introduced by this lack of prior agreement. One of the classical goals of communication is compression of information, and in this context lack of agreement implies that sender and receiver may not agree on the “prior ” from which information is being generated. Most classical mechanisms for compressing turn out to be non-robust when sender and receiver do not agree on the prior. Juba et al. (Proc. ITCS 2011) sh...
Abstract. A private-key cryptosystem may be viewed as a means by which a trusted dealer privately co...
In a recent work (Ghazi et al., SODA 2016), the authors with Komargodski and Kothari initiated the s...
textabstractNewman’s theorem states that we can take any public-coin communication protocol and conv...
Compression is a fundamental goal of both human language and digital communication, yet natural lang...
We consider the problem of one-way communication when the recipient does not know exactly the distri...
We first consider communication complexity which arises in applications where a system needs to comp...
Compression is a fundamental goal of both human language and digital communication, yet natural lan...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Electrical Engineering and Comp...
We examine the communication required for generating random variables remotely. One party Alice is g...
Motivated by an attempt to understand the formation and development of (human) language, we introduc...
Compression is a fundamental goal of both human language and digital communication, yet natural lang...
We introduce a simple model illustrating the utility of context in compressing communication and the...
We study internal compression of communication protocols to their internal entropy, which is the ent...
Abstract: If we can use previous knowledge of the source (or the knowledge of a source that is corre...
We study the problem of compressing interactive communication to its information content I, defined ...
Abstract. A private-key cryptosystem may be viewed as a means by which a trusted dealer privately co...
In a recent work (Ghazi et al., SODA 2016), the authors with Komargodski and Kothari initiated the s...
textabstractNewman’s theorem states that we can take any public-coin communication protocol and conv...
Compression is a fundamental goal of both human language and digital communication, yet natural lang...
We consider the problem of one-way communication when the recipient does not know exactly the distri...
We first consider communication complexity which arises in applications where a system needs to comp...
Compression is a fundamental goal of both human language and digital communication, yet natural lan...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Electrical Engineering and Comp...
We examine the communication required for generating random variables remotely. One party Alice is g...
Motivated by an attempt to understand the formation and development of (human) language, we introduc...
Compression is a fundamental goal of both human language and digital communication, yet natural lang...
We introduce a simple model illustrating the utility of context in compressing communication and the...
We study internal compression of communication protocols to their internal entropy, which is the ent...
Abstract: If we can use previous knowledge of the source (or the knowledge of a source that is corre...
We study the problem of compressing interactive communication to its information content I, defined ...
Abstract. A private-key cryptosystem may be viewed as a means by which a trusted dealer privately co...
In a recent work (Ghazi et al., SODA 2016), the authors with Komargodski and Kothari initiated the s...
textabstractNewman’s theorem states that we can take any public-coin communication protocol and conv...