Furthermore, if no more than transmission errors occur, the receiver can uniquely decode the received word to a codeword.
If more than transmission errors occur, the receiver cannot uniquely decode the received word in general as there might be several possible codewords.
A receiver decodes the signals across multiple antennas, dumping each stream into a unique radio chain.
The number of possibilities must not be so large that the receiver might incorrectly decode which one was intended in the presence of noise.
The receiver of the email messages would later reassemble the original file and decode it.
Once the receiver has decoded the message and interpreted it, they must then decide how to act upon it.
The receiver must be sensitive at the frequency in use and decode the vision and sound signals.
The airborne receiver decoded that and started to transmit its code.
The receiver then decodes the numbers and turns them back into sound.
When the coded data block is received, the receiver first decodes the error-correction code.