992 research outputs found
Bayesian compressive sensing framework for spectrum reconstruction in Rayleigh fading channels
Compressive sensing (CS) is a novel digital signal processing technique that has found great interest in
many applications including communication theory and wireless communications. In wireless communications, CS
is particularly suitable for its application in the area of spectrum sensing for cognitive radios, where the complete
spectrum under observation, with many spectral holes, can be modeled as a sparse wide-band signal in the frequency
domain. Considering the initial works performed to exploit the benefits of Bayesian CS in spectrum sensing, the fading
characteristic of wireless communications has not been considered yet to a great extent, although it is an inherent feature
for all sorts of wireless communications and it must be considered for the design of any practically viable wireless system.
In this paper, we extend the Bayesian CS framework for the recovery of a sparse signal, whose nonzero coefficients follow
a Rayleigh distribution. It is then demonstrated via simulations that mean square error significantly improves when
appropriate prior distribution is used for the faded signal coefficients and thus, in turns, the spectrum reconstruction
improves. Different parameters of the system model, e.g., sparsity level and number of measurements, are then varied
to show the consistency of the results for different cases
Green compressive sampling reconstruction in IoT networks
In this paper, we address the problem of green Compressed Sensing (CS) reconstruction within Internet of Things (IoT) networks, both in terms of computing architecture and reconstruction algorithms. The approach is novel since, unlike most of the literature dealing with energy efficient gathering of the CS measurements, we focus on the energy efficiency of the signal reconstruction stage given the CS measurements. As a first novel contribution, we present an analysis of the energy consumption within the IoT network under two computing architectures. In the first one, reconstruction takes place within the IoT network and the reconstructed data are encoded and transmitted out of the IoT network; in the second one, all the CS measurements are forwarded to off-network devices for reconstruction and storage, i.e., reconstruction is off-loaded. Our analysis shows that the two architectures significantly differ in terms of consumed energy, and it outlines a theoretically motivated criterion to select a green CS reconstruction computing architecture. Specifically, we present a suitable decision function to determine which architecture outperforms the other in terms of energy efficiency. The presented decision function depends on a few IoT network features, such as the network size, the sink connectivity, and other systems’ parameters. As a second novel contribution, we show how to overcome classical performance comparison of different CS reconstruction algorithms usually carried out w.r.t. the achieved accuracy. Specifically, we consider the consumed energy and analyze the energy vs. accuracy trade-off. The herein presented approach, jointly considering signal processing and IoT network issues, is a relevant contribution for designing green compressive sampling architectures in IoT networks
Compressive sensing based Bayesian sparse channel estimation for OFDM communication systems: high performance and low complexity
In orthogonal frequency division modulation (OFDM) communication systems,
channel state information (CSI) is required at receiver due to the fact that
frequency-selective fading channel leads to disgusting inter-symbol
interference (ISI) over data transmission. Broadband channel model is often
described by very few dominant channel taps and they can be probed by
compressive sensing based sparse channel estimation (SCE) methods, e.g.,
orthogonal matching pursuit algorithm, which can take the advantage of sparse
structure effectively in the channel as for prior information. However, these
developed methods are vulnerable to both noise interference and column
coherence of training signal matrix. In other words, the primary objective of
these conventional methods is to catch the dominant channel taps without a
report of posterior channel uncertainty. To improve the estimation performance,
we proposed a compressive sensing based Bayesian sparse channel estimation
(BSCE) method which can not only exploit the channel sparsity but also mitigate
the unexpected channel uncertainty without scarifying any computational
complexity. The propose method can reveal potential ambiguity among multiple
channel estimators that are ambiguous due to observation noise or correlation
interference among columns in the training matrix. Computer simulations show
that propose method can improve the estimation performance when comparing with
conventional SCE methods.Comment: 24 pages,16 figures, submitted for a journa
Simultaneous Bayesian Compressive Sensing and Blind Deconvolution
Publication in the conference proceedings of EUSIPCO, Bucharest, Romania, 201
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