Welcome to the new version of CaltechAUTHORS. Login is currently restricted to library staff. If you notice any issues, please email coda@library.caltech.edu
Published October 9, 2006 | Published
Journal Article Open

On obtaining pseudorandomness from error-correcting codes

Abstract

A number of recent results have constructed randomness extractors and pseudorandom generators (PRGs) directly from certain error-correcting codes. The underlying construction in these results amounts to picking a random index into the codeword and outputting m consecutive symbols (the codeword is obtained from the weak random source in the case of extractors, and from a hard function in the case of PRGs). We study this construction applied to general cyclic error-correcting codes, with the goal of understanding what pseudorandom objects it can produce. We show that every cyclic code with sufficient distance yields extractors that fool all linear tests. Further, we show that every polynomial code with sufficient distance yields extractors that fool all low-degree prediction tests. These are the first results that apply to univariate (rather than multivariate) polynomial codes, hinting that Reed-Solomon codes may yield good randomness extractors. Our proof technique gives rise to a systematic way of producing unconditional PRGs against restricted classes of tests. In particular, we obtain PRGs fooling all linear tests (which amounts to a construction of epsilon-biased spaces), and we obtain PRGs fooling all low-degree prediction tests.

Additional Information

This research was supported by NSF grant CCF-0346991 and by BSF grant 2004329. We thank Eli Ben-Sasson for helpful discussions and Andrej Bogdanov for sharing a draft of [Bog05] with us.

Attached Files

Published - TR06-128.pdf

Files

TR06-128.pdf
Files (145.5 kB)
Name Size Download all
md5:549be29687ff461877a1b12444c2d065
145.5 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023