The paper presents a refinement of the expurgation technique introduced by Gallager, which shows that for a wide range of channels and pairwise-independent code ensembles, with high probability, expurgating an arbitrarily small fraction of codewords from a randomly selected code results in a code that attains the expurgated exponent.
The key insights are:
The authors define a sequence δn that depends on the channel and the ensemble, and show that if δn converges to 0 as the code length n goes to infinity, then with high probability, a mother code with M'n = (1+ε)Mn codewords will contain at least Mn(1+ε1) codewords that each achieve the expurgated exponent, for any 0 < ε1 < ε.
This implies that good mother codes, from which the expurgated code can be obtained, are easily found, and only a small fraction of codewords need to be expurgated to achieve the expurgated exponent.
The proof uses Markov's inequality and the concentration of the individual codeword error exponents around the expurgated exponent, similar to recent works on the concentration of random code error exponents.
The result applies to various ensembles, including i.i.d. and constant composition codes over discrete memoryless channels, as well as channels with memory like the finite-state channel.
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