Soft x-ray diffraction of striated muscle
S.F. Fan, W.B. Yun, et al.
Proceedings of SPIE 1989
Complexity distortion theory (CDT) is a mathematical framework providing a unifying perspective on media representation. The key component of this theory is the substitution of the decoder in Shannon's classical communication model with a universal Turing machine. Using this model, the mathematical framework for examining the efficiency of coding schemes is the algorithmic or Kolmogorov complexity. CDT extends this framework to include distortion by defining the complexity distortion function. We show that despite their different natures, CDT and rate distortion theory (RDT) predict asymptotically the same results, under stationary and ergodic assumptions. This closes the circle of representation models, from probabilistic models of information proposed by Shannon in information and rate distortion theories, to deterministic algorithmic models, proposed by Kolmogorov in Kolomogorov complexity theory and its extension to lossy source coding, CDT.
S.F. Fan, W.B. Yun, et al.
Proceedings of SPIE 1989
Minkyong Kim, Zhen Liu, et al.
INFOCOM 2008
Michael C. McCord, Violetta Cavalli-Sforza
ACL 2007
Xiaozhu Kang, Hui Zhang, et al.
ICWS 2008