241 research outputs found
On the Design of a Novel Joint Network-Channel Coding Scheme for the Multiple Access Relay Channel
This paper proposes a novel joint non-binary network-channel code for the
Time-Division Decode-and-Forward Multiple Access Relay Channel (TD-DF-MARC),
where the relay linearly combines -- over a non-binary finite field -- the
coded sequences from the source nodes. A method based on an EXIT chart analysis
is derived for selecting the best coefficients of the linear combination.
Moreover, it is shown that for different setups of the system, different
coefficients should be chosen in order to improve the performance. This
conclusion contrasts with previous works where a random selection was
considered. Monte Carlo simulations show that the proposed scheme outperforms,
in terms of its gap to the outage probabilities, the previously published joint
network-channel coding approaches. Besides, this gain is achieved by using very
short-length codewords, which makes the scheme particularly attractive for
low-latency applications.Comment: 28 pages, 9 figures; Submitted to IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in
Communications - Special Issue on Theories and Methods for Advanced Wireless
Relays, 201
Searching for high-rate convolutional codes via binary syndrome trellises
Rate R=(c-1)/c convolutional codes of constraint length nu can be represented by conventional syndrome trellises with a state complexity of s=nu or by binary syndrome trellises with a state complexity of s=nu or s=nu+1, which corresponds to at most 2^s states at each trellis level. It is shown that if the parity-check polynomials fulfill certain conditions, there exist binary syndrome trellises with optimum state complexity s=nu. The BEAST is modified to handle parity-check matrices and used to generate code tables for optimum free distance rate R=(c-1)/c, c=3,4,5, convolutional codes for conventional syndrome trellises and binary syndrome trellises with optimum state complexity. These results show that the loss in distance properties due to the optimum state complexity restriction for binary trellises is typically negligible
Iteratively Decoded Irregular Variable Length Coding and Sphere-Packing Modulation-Aided Differential Space-Time Spreading
In this paper we consider serially concatenated and iteratively decoded Irregular Variable Length Coding (IrVLC) combined with precoded Differential Space-Time Spreading (DSTS) aided multidimensional Sphere Packing (SP) modulation designed for near-capacity joint source and channel coding. The IrVLC scheme comprises a number of component Variable Length Coding (VLC) codebooks having different coding rates for the sake of encoding particular fractions of the input source symbol stream. The relative length of these source-stream fractions can be chosen with the aid of EXtrinsic Information Transfer (EXIT) charts in order to shape the EXIT curve of the IrVLC codec, so that an open EXIT chart tunnel may be created even at low Eb/N0 values that are close to the capacity bound of the channel. These schemes are shown to be capable of operating within 0.9 dB of the DSTS-SP channel’s capacity bound using an average interleaver length of 113, 100 bits and an effective bandwidth efficiency of 1 bit/s/Hz, assuming ideal Nyquist filtering. By contrast, the equivalent-rate regular VLC-based benchmarker scheme was found to be capable of operating at 1.4 dB from the capacity bound, which is about 1.56 times the corresponding discrepancy of the proposed IrVLC-aided scheme
The Error-Pattern-Correcting Turbo Equalizer
The error-pattern correcting code (EPCC) is incorporated in the design of a
turbo equalizer (TE) with aim to correct dominant error events of the
inter-symbol interference (ISI) channel at the output of its matching Viterbi
detector. By targeting the low Hamming-weight interleaved errors of the outer
convolutional code, which are responsible for low Euclidean-weight errors in
the Viterbi trellis, the turbo equalizer with an error-pattern correcting code
(TE-EPCC) exhibits a much lower bit-error rate (BER) floor compared to the
conventional non-precoded TE, especially for high rate applications. A
maximum-likelihood upper bound is developed on the BER floor of the TE-EPCC for
a generalized two-tap ISI channel, in order to study TE-EPCC's signal-to-noise
ratio (SNR) gain for various channel conditions and design parameters. In
addition, the SNR gain of the TE-EPCC relative to an existing precoded TE is
compared to demonstrate the present TE's superiority for short interleaver
lengths and high coding rates.Comment: This work has been submitted to the special issue of the IEEE
Transactions on Information Theory titled: "Facets of Coding Theory: from
Algorithms to Networks". This work was supported in part by the NSF
Theoretical Foundation Grant 0728676
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