Abstract

This paper studies the fundamental limits of the minimum average length of lossless and lossy variable-length compression, allowing a nonzero error probability $\epsilon $ , for lossless compression. We give nonasymptotic bounds on the minimum average length in terms of Erokhin’s rate-distortion function and we use those bounds to obtain a Gaussian approximation on the speed of approach to the limit, which is quite accurate for all but small blocklengths: $ (1 - \epsilon ) k H(\mathsf S) - {({({k V(\mathsf S)}/{2 \pi })})}^{1/2} \mathop {\rm exp}[- ({( Q^{-1}\left ({\epsilon }\right ))^{2}}/{2})]$ , where $ Q^{-1}\left ({\cdot }\right )$ is the functional inverse of the standard Gaussian complementary cumulative distribution function, and $V(\mathsf S)$ is the source dispersion. A nonzero error probability thus not only reduces the asymptotically achievable rate by a factor of $1 - \epsilon $ , but this asymptotic limit is approached from below, i.e., larger source dispersions and shorter blocklengths are beneficial. Variable-length lossy compression under an excess distortion constraint is shown to exhibit similar properties.

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