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Main Authors: Chen, Kai-Chun, Wang, I-Hsiang
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.13588
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author Chen, Kai-Chun
Wang, I-Hsiang
author_facet Chen, Kai-Chun
Wang, I-Hsiang
contents Information velocity (IV) is a recently proposed notion to capture the speed of reliable information dissemination over a large-scale network. It is the speed at which reliable end-to-end communication over $k$ hops can be achieved within $t$ time instances, and is defined formally as the asymptotic ratio $k/t$ as $k$ tends to infinity subject to vanishing error probability. To date, even for a tandem of binary erasure channels without feedback, the optimal IV for disseminating multiple (say $m$) bits remains unknown. We make progress on this open problem by characterizing the optimal IV for the regime where the message size $m = o(k^{1/2})$. The main contribution lies in achievability, where we propose a simple bit-separation scheme that pipelines message bits in an orderly fashion with carefully designed temporal spacing so that the flows of different bits do not collide with one another with high probability. This is in sharp contrast to previous attempts in the literature where schemes involve coding over time and across nodes. To go beyond the regime $m = o(k^{1/2})$, we further investigate the setting where every node in the network has strictly causal access to the state information of the BEC links in the entire network. For such a setting with global state information (GSI), we develop an enhanced scheme and characterize the optimal IV for the regime where the message size $m = o(k)$. Interestingly, for the regime $m = o(k^{1/2})$, GSI does not improve the information velocity.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2604_13588
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle On the Information Velocity over a Tandem of Erasure Channels
Chen, Kai-Chun
Wang, I-Hsiang
Information Theory
Information velocity (IV) is a recently proposed notion to capture the speed of reliable information dissemination over a large-scale network. It is the speed at which reliable end-to-end communication over $k$ hops can be achieved within $t$ time instances, and is defined formally as the asymptotic ratio $k/t$ as $k$ tends to infinity subject to vanishing error probability. To date, even for a tandem of binary erasure channels without feedback, the optimal IV for disseminating multiple (say $m$) bits remains unknown. We make progress on this open problem by characterizing the optimal IV for the regime where the message size $m = o(k^{1/2})$. The main contribution lies in achievability, where we propose a simple bit-separation scheme that pipelines message bits in an orderly fashion with carefully designed temporal spacing so that the flows of different bits do not collide with one another with high probability. This is in sharp contrast to previous attempts in the literature where schemes involve coding over time and across nodes. To go beyond the regime $m = o(k^{1/2})$, we further investigate the setting where every node in the network has strictly causal access to the state information of the BEC links in the entire network. For such a setting with global state information (GSI), we develop an enhanced scheme and characterize the optimal IV for the regime where the message size $m = o(k)$. Interestingly, for the regime $m = o(k^{1/2})$, GSI does not improve the information velocity.
title On the Information Velocity over a Tandem of Erasure Channels
topic Information Theory
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.13588