Skip to search formSkip to main contentSkip to account menu

Distributed source coding

Known as: DSC, Wyner-Ziv theorem, Wyner–Ziv theorem 
Distributed source coding (DSC) is an important problem in information theory and communication. DSC problems regard the compression of multiple… 
Wikipedia (opens in a new tab)

Papers overview

Semantic Scholar uses AI to extract papers important to this topic.
2010
2010
We consider the distributed source coding system of $L$ correlated Gaussian sources $Y_i,i=1,2,...,L$ which are noisy… 
2009
2009
The compress-and-forward (CF) strategy achieves the optimal diversity-multiplexing tradeoff (DMT) of a three-node half-duplex… 
2008
2008
This paper presents a reduced-reference image quality assessment scheme using distributed source coding for remotely monitoring… 
2007
2007
Practical Distributed Source Coding and Its Application to the Compression of Encrypted Data 
2007
2007
We are concerned with the problem of maximizing the worst-case lifetime of a data-gathering wireless sensor network consisting of… 
2006
2006
In this paper, the design and construction methods of the DISCUS (distributed source coding using syndromes) scheme in wireless… 
2005
2005
A first attempt to exploit distributed source coding (DSC) principles for the lossless compression of hyperspectral images is… 
Highly Cited
2005
Highly Cited
2005
Hyperspectral images have correlation at the level of pixels; moreover, images from neighboring frequency bands are also closely… 
2005
2005
In this paper a novel scalable video coder, based on the principle of distributed source coding with side information is proposed… 
2005
2005
In distributed video source coding side-information at the decoder is generated as a temporal prediction based on previous frames…