Distributed Signal Detection Under Communication Constraints
Abstract
Independent draws from a $d$-dimensional spherical Gaussian distribution are distributed across users, each holding one sample. A central server seeks to distinguish between the two hypotheses: the distribution has zero mean, or the mean has $\ell_2$-norm at least $\varepsilon$, a pre-specified threshold. However, the users can each transmit at most $\ell$ bits to the server. This is the problem of detecting whether an observed signal is simply white noise in a distributed setting. We study this distributed testing problem with and without the availability of a common randomness shared by the users. We design schemes with and without such shared randomness which achieve sample complexities. We then obtain lower bounds for protocols with public randomness, tight when $\ell=O(1)$. We finally conclude with several conjectures and open problems.
Cite
Text
Acharya et al. "Distributed Signal Detection Under Communication Constraints." Conference on Learning Theory, 2020.Markdown
[Acharya et al. "Distributed Signal Detection Under Communication Constraints." Conference on Learning Theory, 2020.](https://mlanthology.org/colt/2020/acharya2020colt-distributed/)BibTeX
@inproceedings{acharya2020colt-distributed,
title = {{Distributed Signal Detection Under Communication Constraints}},
author = {Acharya, Jayadev and Canonne, Clément L and Tyagi, Himanshu},
booktitle = {Conference on Learning Theory},
year = {2020},
pages = {41-63},
volume = {125},
url = {https://mlanthology.org/colt/2020/acharya2020colt-distributed/}
}