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Broadcasting on Two-Dimensional Regular Grids

Abstract

We study a specialization of the problem of broadcasting on directed acyclic graphs, namely, broadcasting on 2D regular grids. Consider a 2D regular grid with source vertex XX at layer 00 and k+1k+1 vertices at layer k1k\geq 1, which are at distance kk from XX. Every vertex of the 2D regular grid has outdegree 22, the vertices at the boundary have indegree 11, and all other vertices have indegree 22. At time 00, XX is given a random bit. At time k1k\geq 1, each vertex in layer kk receives transmitted bits from its parents in layer k1k-1, where the bits pass through binary symmetric channels with noise level δ(0,1/2)\delta\in(0,1/2). Then, each vertex combines its received bits using a common Boolean processing function to produce an output bit. The objective is to recover XX with probability of error better than 1/21/2 from all vertices at layer kk as kk \rightarrow \infty. Besides their natural interpretation in communication networks, such broadcasting processes can be construed as 1D probabilistic cellular automata (PCA) with boundary conditions that limit the number of sites at each time kk to k+1k+1. We conjecture that it is impossible to propagate information in a 2D regular grid regardless of the noise level and the choice of processing function. In this paper, we make progress towards establishing this conjecture, and prove using ideas from percolation and coding theory that recovery of XX is impossible for any δ\delta provided that all vertices use either AND or XOR processing functions. Furthermore, we propose a martingale-based approach that establishes the impossibility of recovering XX for any δ\delta when all NAND processing functions are used if certain supermartingales can be rigorously constructed. We also provide numerical evidence for the existence of these supermartingales by computing explicit examples for different values of δ\delta via linear programming.

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