163,490 research outputs found
Optimizing Network Coding Algorithms for Multiple Applications.
Deviating from the archaic communication approach of treating information as a fluid moving through pipes, the concepts of Network Coding (NC) suggest that optimal throughput of a multicast network can be achieved by processing information at individual network nodes. However, existing challenges to harness the advantages of NC concepts for practical applications have prevented the development of NC into an effective solution to increase the performance of practical communication networks. In response, the research work presented in this thesis proposes cross-layer NC solutions to increase the network throughput of data multicast as well as video quality of video multicast applications. First, three algorithms are presented to improve the throughput of NC enabled networks by minimizing the NC coefficient vector overhead, optimizing the NC redundancy allocation and improving the robustness of NC against bursty packet losses. Considering the fact that majority of network traffic occupies video, rest of the proposed NC algorithms are content-aware and are optimized for both data and video multicast applications. A set of content and network-aware optimization algorithms, which allocate redundancies for NC considering content properties as well as the network status, are proposed to efficiently multicast data and video across content delivery networks. Furthermore content and channel-aware joint channel and network coding algorithms are proposed to efficiently multicast data and video across wireless networks. Finally, the possibilities of performing joint source and network coding are explored to increase the robustness of high volume video multicast applications. Extensive simulation studies indicate significant improvements with the proposed algorithms to increase the network throughput and video quality over related state-of-the-art solutions. Hence, it is envisaged that the proposed algorithms will contribute to the advancement of data and video multicast protocols in the future communication networks
Distributed Deep Joint Source-Channel Coding with Decoder-Only Side Information
We consider low-latency image transmission over a noisy wireless channel when
correlated side information is present only at the receiver side (the Wyner-Ziv
scenario). In particular, we are interested in developing practical schemes
using a data-driven joint source-channel coding (JSCC) approach, which has been
previously shown to outperform conventional separation-based approaches in the
practical finite blocklength regimes, and to provide graceful degradation with
channel quality. We propose a novel neural network architecture that
incorporates the decoder-only side information at multiple stages at the
receiver side. Our results demonstrate that the proposed method succeeds in
integrating the side information, yielding improved performance at all channel
noise levels in terms of the various distortion criteria considered here,
especially at low channel signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs) and small bandwidth
ratios (BRs). We also provide the source code of the proposed method to enable
further research and reproducibility of the results.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
On practical design for joint distributed source and network coding
This paper considers the problem of communicating correlated information from multiple source nodes over a network of noiseless channels to multiple destination nodes, where each destination node wants to recover all sources. The problem involves a joint consideration of distributed compression and network information relaying. Although the optimal rate region has been theoretically characterized, it was not clear how to design practical communication schemes with low complexity. This work provides a partial solution to this problem by proposing a low-complexity scheme for the special case with two sources whose correlation is characterized by a binary symmetric channel. Our scheme is based on a careful combination of linear syndrome-based Slepian-Wolf coding and random linear mixing (network coding). It is in general suboptimal; however, its low complexity and robustness to network dynamics make it suitable for practical implementation
Network vector quantization
We present an algorithm for designing locally optimal vector quantizers for general networks. We discuss the algorithm's implementation and compare the performance of the resulting "network vector quantizers" to traditional vector quantizers (VQs) and to rate-distortion (R-D) bounds where available. While some special cases of network codes (e.g., multiresolution (MR) and multiple description (MD) codes) have been studied in the literature, we here present a unifying approach that both includes these existing solutions as special cases and provides solutions to previously unsolved examples
DRASIC: Distributed Recurrent Autoencoder for Scalable Image Compression
We propose a new architecture for distributed image compression from a group
of distributed data sources. The work is motivated by practical needs of
data-driven codec design, low power consumption, robustness, and data privacy.
The proposed architecture, which we refer to as Distributed Recurrent
Autoencoder for Scalable Image Compression (DRASIC), is able to train
distributed encoders and one joint decoder on correlated data sources. Its
compression capability is much better than the method of training codecs
separately. Meanwhile, the performance of our distributed system with 10
distributed sources is only within 2 dB peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR) of
the performance of a single codec trained with all data sources. We experiment
distributed sources with different correlations and show how our data-driven
methodology well matches the Slepian-Wolf Theorem in Distributed Source Coding
(DSC). To the best of our knowledge, this is the first data-driven DSC
framework for general distributed code design with deep learning
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