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In order to communicate a message over a noisy channel, a sender (Alice) uses an error-correcting code to encode her message x into a codeword. The receiver (Bob) decodes it correctly whenever there is at most a small constant fraction of adversarial error in the transmitted codeword. This work investigates the setting where Bob is computationally bounded. Specifically, Bob receives the message as a stream and must process it and write x in order to a write-only tape while using low (say polylogarithmic) space. We show three basic results about this setting, which are informally as follows: (1) There is a stream decodable code of near-quadratic length. (2) There is no stream decodable code of sub-quadratic length. (3) If Bob need only compute a private linear function of the input bits, instead of writing them all to the output tape, there is a stream decodable code of near-linear length.
Gupta et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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