Sampling Constrained Asynchronous Communication: How to Sleep Efficiently
Venkat Chandar, Aslan Tchamkerten

TL;DR
This paper characterizes the minimum sampling rate needed for reliable asynchronous communication, showing rates above 1/B are sufficient while lower rates are unreliable, using a new adaptive sampling scheme.
Contribution
It provides an essentially tight characterization of the minimal sampling rate for asynchronous communication, extending previous asymptotic results to rates approaching zero.
Findings
Sampling rate above 1/B suffices for reliable communication.
Sampling rate below o(1/B) leads to unreliability.
Introduces a multi-phase adaptive sampling scheme for change detection.
Abstract
The minimum energy, and, more generally, the minimum cost, to transmit one bit of information has been recently derived for bursty communication when information is available infrequently at random times at the transmitter. Furthermore, it has been shown that even if the receiver is constrained to sample only a fraction of the channel outputs, there is no capacity penalty. That is, for any strictly positive sampling rate , the asynchronous capacity per unit cost is the same as under full sampling, i.e., when . Moreover, there is no penalty in terms of decoding delay. The above results are asymptotic in nature, considering the limit as the number of bits to be transmitted tends to infinity, while the sampling rate remains fixed. A natural question is then whether the sampling rate can drop to zero without introducing a capacity (or…
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