Tight Bounds on List-Decodable and List-Recoverable Zero-Rate Codes
Nicolas Resch, Chen Yuan, Yihan Zhang

TL;DR
This paper establishes tight bounds on the size of zero-rate list-decodable and list-recoverable codes, showing they are proportional to 1/epsilon, which improves and generalizes previous results for binary and larger alphabets.
Contribution
It proves that for all parameters with q ≥ 3, list-recoverable codes near the zero-rate threshold have size Θ(1/epsilon), extending prior binary-focused work to larger alphabets.
Findings
Code size is Θ(1/epsilon) near the threshold.
Matching upper and lower bounds are established.
Results generalize previous binary alphabet work.
Abstract
In this work, we consider the list-decodability and list-recoverability of codes in the zero-rate regime. Briefly, a code is -list-recoverable if for all tuples of input lists with each and the number of codewords such that for at most choices of is less than ; list-decoding is the special case of . In recent work by Resch, Yuan and Zhang~(ICALP~2023) the zero-rate threshold for list-recovery was determined for all parameters: that is, the work explicitly computes with the property that for all (a) there exist infinite families positive-rate -list-recoverable codes, and (b) any -list-recoverable code has rate . In fact, in the latter case the code…
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