On the Public Communication Needed to Achieve SK Capacity in the Multiterminal Source Model
Manuj Mukherjee, Navin Kashyap, and Yogesh Sankarasubramaniam

TL;DR
This paper investigates the minimal public communication needed for maximal-rate secret key generation in multiterminal models, identifying conditions under which this rate equals the communication for omniscience, especially in PIN models.
Contribution
It derives a lower bound on the communication complexity for secret key generation, introduces a polynomial-time verifiable condition for PIN models, and characterizes when omnivocal communication is necessary.
Findings
Lower bound on R_SK for secret key generation.
Type S condition guarantees R_SK equals R_CO in PIN models.
Omnivocality is necessary under a stricter Type S condition for multiterminal models.
Abstract
The focus of this paper is on the public communication required for generating a maximal-rate secret key (SK) within the multiterminal source model of Csisz{\'a}r and Narayan. Building on the prior work of Tyagi for the two-terminal scenario, we derive a lower bound on the communication complexity, , defined to be the minimum rate of public communication needed to generate a maximal-rate SK. It is well known that the minimum rate of communication for omniscience, denoted by , is an upper bound on . For the class of pairwise independent network (PIN) models defined on uniform hypergraphs, we show that a certain "Type " condition, which is verifiable in polynomial time, guarantees that our lower bound on meets the upper bound. Thus, PIN models satisfying our condition are -maximal,…
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