643 research outputs found
A Software-Defined Channel Sounder for Industrial Environments with Fast Time Variance
Novel industrial wireless applications require wideband, real-time channel
characterization due to complex multipath propagation. Rapid machine motion
leads to fast time variance of the channel's reflective behavior, which must be
captured for radio channel characterization. Additionally, inhomogeneous radio
channels demand highly flexible measurements. Existing approaches for radio
channel measurements either lack flexibility or wide-band, real-time
performance with fast time variance. In this paper, we propose a correlative
channel sounding approach utilizing a software-defined architecture. The
approach enables real-time, wide-band measurements with fast time variance
immune to active interference. The desired performance is validated with a
demanding industrial application example.Comment: Submitted to the 15th International Symposium on Wireless
Communication Systems (ISWCS 2018
Zero-Delay Joint Source-Channel Coding in the Presence of Interference Known at the Encoder
Zero-delay transmission of a Gaussian source over an additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) channel is considered in the presence of an additive Gaussian interference signal. The mean squared error (MSE) distortion is minimized under an average power constraint assuming that the interference signal is known at the transmitter. Optimality of simple linear transmission does not hold in this setting due to the presence of the known interference signal. While the optimal encoder-decoder pair remains an open problem, various non-linear transmission schemes are proposed in this paper. In particular, interference concentration (ICO) and one-dimensional lattice (1DL) strategies, using both uniform and non-uniform quantization of the interference signal, are studied. It is shown that, in contrast to typical scalar quantization of Gaussian sources, a non-uniform quantizer, whose quantization intervals become smaller as we go further from zero, improves the performance. Given that the optimal decoder is the minimum MSE (MMSE) estimator, a necessary condition for the optimality of the encoder is derived, and the numerically optimized encoder (NOE) satisfying this condition is obtained. Based on the numerical results, it is shown that 1DL with nonuniform quantization performs closer (compared to the other schemes) to the numerically optimized encoder while requiring significantly lower complexity
Sparse Regression Codes for Multi-terminal Source and Channel Coding
We study a new class of codes for Gaussian multi-terminal source and channel
coding. These codes are designed using the statistical framework of
high-dimensional linear regression and are called Sparse Superposition or
Sparse Regression codes. Codewords are linear combinations of subsets of
columns of a design matrix. These codes were recently introduced by Barron and
Joseph and shown to achieve the channel capacity of AWGN channels with
computationally feasible decoding. They have also recently been shown to
achieve the optimal rate-distortion function for Gaussian sources. In this
paper, we demonstrate how to implement random binning and superposition coding
using sparse regression codes. In particular, with minimum-distance
encoding/decoding it is shown that sparse regression codes attain the optimal
information-theoretic limits for a variety of multi-terminal source and channel
coding problems.Comment: 9 pages, appeared in the Proceedings of the 50th Annual Allerton
Conference on Communication, Control, and Computing - 201
- …