1,622 research outputs found
Short Packets over Block-Memoryless Fading Channels: Pilot-Assisted or Noncoherent Transmission?
We present nonasymptotic upper and lower bounds on the maximum coding rate
achievable when transmitting short packets over a Rician memoryless
block-fading channel for a given requirement on the packet error probability.
We focus on the practically relevant scenario in which there is no \emph{a
priori} channel state information available at the transmitter and at the
receiver. An upper bound built upon the min-max converse is compared to two
lower bounds: the first one relies on a noncoherent transmission strategy in
which the fading channel is not estimated explicitly at the receiver; the
second one employs pilot-assisted transmission (PAT) followed by
maximum-likelihood channel estimation and scaled mismatched nearest-neighbor
decoding at the receiver. Our bounds are tight enough to unveil the optimum
number of diversity branches that a packet should span so that the energy per
bit required to achieve a target packet error probability is minimized, for a
given constraint on the code rate and the packet size. Furthermore, the bounds
reveal that noncoherent transmission is more energy efficient than PAT, even
when the number of pilot symbols and their power is optimized. For example, for
the case when a coded packet of symbols is transmitted using a channel
code of rate bits/channel use, over a block-fading channel with block
size equal to symbols, PAT requires an additional dB of energy per
information bit to achieve a packet error probability of compared to
a suitably designed noncoherent transmission scheme. Finally, we devise a PAT
scheme based on punctured tail-biting quasi-cyclic codes and ordered statistics
decoding, whose performance are close ( dB gap at packet error
probability) to the ones predicted by our PAT lower bound. This shows that the
PAT lower bound provides useful guidelines on the design of actual PAT schemes.Comment: 30 pages, 5 figures, journa
Finite-Blocklength Bounds on the Maximum Coding Rate of Rician Fading Channels with Applications to Pilot-Assisted Transmission
We present nonasymptotic bounds on the maximum coding rate achievable over a
Rician block-fading channel for a fixed packet size and a fixed packet error
probability. Our bounds, which apply to the scenario where no a priori channel
state information is available at the receiver, allow one to quantify the
tradeoff between the rate gains resulting from the exploitation of
time-frequency diversity and the rate loss resulting from fast channel
variations and pilot-symbol overhead
Turbo Packet Combining for Broadband Space-Time BICM Hybrid-ARQ Systems with Co-Channel Interference
In this paper, efficient turbo packet combining for single carrier (SC)
broadband multiple-input--multiple-output (MIMO) hybrid--automatic repeat
request (ARQ) transmission with unknown co-channel interference (CCI) is
studied. We propose a new frequency domain soft minimum mean square error
(MMSE)-based signal level combining technique where received signals and
channel frequency responses (CFR)s corresponding to all retransmissions are
used to decode the data packet. We provide a recursive implementation algorithm
for the introduced scheme, and show that both its computational complexity and
memory requirements are quite insensitive to the ARQ delay, i.e., maximum
number of ARQ rounds. Furthermore, we analyze the asymptotic performance, and
show that under a sum-rank condition on the CCI MIMO ARQ channel, the proposed
packet combining scheme is not interference-limited. Simulation results are
provided to demonstrate the gains offered by the proposed technique.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, and 2 table
Low-Latency Short-Packet Transmissions: Fixed Length or HARQ?
We study short-packet communications, subject to latency and reliability
constraints, under the premises of limited frequency diversity and no time
diversity. The question addressed is whether, and when, hybrid automatic repeat
request (HARQ) outperforms fixed-blocklength schemes with no feedback (FBL-NF)
in such a setting. We derive an achievability bound for HARQ, under the
assumption of a limited number of transmissions. The bound relies on
pilot-assisted transmission to estimate the fading channel and scaled
nearest-neighbor decoding at the receiver. We compare our achievability bound
for HARQ to stateof-the-art achievability bounds for FBL-NF communications and
show that for a given latency, reliability, number of information bits, and
number of diversity branches, HARQ may significantly outperform FBL-NF. For
example, for an average latency of 1 ms, a target error probability of 10^-3,
30 information bits, and 3 diversity branches, the gain in energy per bit is
about 4 dB.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, accepted to GLOBECOM 201
Reliable Transmission of Short Packets through Queues and Noisy Channels under Latency and Peak-Age Violation Guarantees
This work investigates the probability that the delay and the peak-age of
information exceed a desired threshold in a point-to-point communication system
with short information packets. The packets are generated according to a
stationary memoryless Bernoulli process, placed in a single-server queue and
then transmitted over a wireless channel. A variable-length stop-feedback
coding scheme---a general strategy that encompasses simple automatic repetition
request (ARQ) and more sophisticated hybrid ARQ techniques as special
cases---is used by the transmitter to convey the information packets to the
receiver. By leveraging finite-blocklength results, the delay violation and the
peak-age violation probabilities are characterized without resorting to
approximations based on large-deviation theory as in previous literature.
Numerical results illuminate the dependence of delay and peak-age violation
probability on system parameters such as the frame size and the undetected
error probability, and on the chosen packet-management policy. The guidelines
provided by our analysis are particularly useful for the design of low-latency
ultra-reliable communication systems.Comment: To appear in IEEE journal on selected areas of communication (IEEE
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