Joint source and channel coding
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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
- ^ 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. ISBN 0-7923-9091-1.
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