Almost Separable Matrices (1410.1826v1)
Abstract: An $m \times n$ matrix $\mathsf{A}$ with column supports ${S_i}$ is $k$-separable if the disjunctions $\bigcup_{i \in \mathcal{K}} S_i$ are all distinct over all sets $\mathcal{K}$ of cardinality $k$. While a simple counting bound shows that $m > k \log_2 n/k$ rows are required for a separable matrix to exist, in fact it is necessary for $m$ to be about a factor of $k$ more than this. In this paper, we consider a weaker definition of almost $k$-separability', which requires that the disjunctions are
mostly distinct'. We show using a random construction that these matrices exist with $m = O(k \log n)$ rows, which is optimal for $k = O(n{1-\beta})$. Further, by calculating explicit constants, we show how almost separable matrices give new bounds on the rate of nonadaptive group testing.