3 research outputs found

    Energy-Efficient Power Control for Contention-Based Synchronization in OFDMA Systems with Discrete Powers and Limited Feedback

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    This work derives a distributed and iterative algorithm by which mobile terminals can selfishly control their transmit powers during the synchronization procedure specified by the IEEE 802.16m and the 3GPP-LTE standards for orthogonal frequency-division multiple-access technologies. The proposed solution aims at maximizing the energy efficiency of the network and is derived on the basis of a finite noncooperative game in which the players have discrete action sets of transmit powers. The set of Nash equilibria of the game is investigated, and a distributed power control algorithm is proposed to achieve synchronization in an energy-efficient manner under the assumption that the feedback from the base station is limited. Numerical results show that the proposed solution improves the energy efficiency as well as the timing estimation accuracy of the network compared to existing alternatives, while requiring a reasonable amount of information to be exchanged on the return channel

    Power allocation for optimal synchronization of CDMA and UWB signals based on game theory

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    This thesis describes a theoretical framework for the design and the analysis of distributed (decentralized) power control algorithms for wireless networks using ultrawideband (UWB) technologies over a frequency-selective and slow-fading channel, focusing of the issue of initial code synchronization. The framework described here is general enough to also encompass the analysis of Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) systems, seen as a special case of the Impulse-Radio (IR)-UWB technology. To develop this work, we use the tools of game theory that are expedient for deriving scalable, energy-efficient, distributed power control schemes to be applied to a population of battery-operated user terminals in a rich multipath environment. The power control issue is modeled as a noncooperative game in which each transmitter-receiver pair chooses its transmit power and detection threshold pair so as to maximize its own utility, which is defined as the ratio of the probability of signal detection to the transmitted energy per acquisition period (or per bit)

    A Game-Theoretic Perspective on Code Synchronization for CDMA Wireless Systems

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