Derandomizing compressed sensing with combinatorial design

P Jung, R Kueng, DG Mixon - arXiv preprint arXiv:1812.08130, 2018 - arxiv.org
arXiv preprint arXiv:1812.08130, 2018arxiv.org
Compressed sensing is the art of reconstructing structured $ n $-dimensional vectors from
substantially fewer measurements than naively anticipated. A plethora of analytic
reconstruction guarantees support this credo. The strongest among them are based on deep
results from large-dimensional probability theory that require a considerable amount of
randomness in the measurement design. Here, we demonstrate that derandomization
techniques allow for considerably reducing the amount of randomness that is required for …
Compressed sensing is the art of reconstructing structured -dimensional vectors from substantially fewer measurements than naively anticipated. A plethora of analytic reconstruction guarantees support this credo. The strongest among them are based on deep results from large-dimensional probability theory that require a considerable amount of randomness in the measurement design. Here, we demonstrate that derandomization techniques allow for considerably reducing the amount of randomness that is required for such proof strategies. More, precisely we establish uniform s-sparse reconstruction guarantees for measurements that are chosen independently from strength-four orthogonal arrays and maximal sets of mutually unbiased bases, respectively. These are highly structured families of vectors that imitate signed Bernoulli and standard Gaussian vectors in a (partially) derandomized fashion.
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