Arithmetic codes resembling neural encoding (Q1084076)
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scientific article; zbMATH DE number 3976930
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | Arithmetic codes resembling neural encoding |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 3976930 |
Statements
Arithmetic codes resembling neural encoding (English)
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1986
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In a residue code with the moduli \(m_ 1,m_ 2,...,m_ n\) the integer X is represented by the vectorial form \(\{r_ 1,r_ 2,...,r_ n\}\), such that \(r_ i\equiv X mod m_ i\), \(i=1,2,...,n\). Since the moduli are not pairwise relative primes, not every n-tuple of integers \(\{r_ i|\) \(0\leq r_ i<m_ i\), \(i=1,2,...,n\}\) represents a code word: only those satisfying \(r_ i\equiv r_ j mod g_{ij}\), where \(g_{ij}\) is the greatest common divisor of \(m_ i\) and \(m_ j\). Thus redundancy is introduced in a distributed way, inherent in the structure of the system. Known theorems on the error detecting, identifying, and correcting capacity of such codes are generalized. Application to brain modeling is touched upon.
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residue code
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redundancy
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Application to brain modeling
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