772 research outputs found
Interleaving Gains for Receive Diversity Schemes of Distributed Turbo Codes in Wireless Half–Duplex Relay Channels
This paper proposes the interleaving gain in two different distributed turbo-coding schemes: Distributed Turbo Codes (DTC) and Distributed Multiple Turbo Codes (DMTC) for half-duplex relay system as an extension of our previous work on turbo coding interleaver design for direct communication channel. For these schemes with half-duplex constraint, the source node transmits its information with the parity bit sequence(s) to both the relay and the destination nodes during the first phase. The relay received the data from the source and process it by using decode and forward protocol. For the second transmission period, the decoded systematic data at relay is interleaved and re-encoded by a Recursive Systematic Convolutional (RSC) encoder and forwarded to the destination. At destination node, the signals received from the source and relay are processed by using turbo log-MAP iterative decoding for retrieving the original information bits. We demonstrate via simulations that the interleaving gain has a large effect with DTC scheme when we use only one RSC encoder at both the source and relay with best performance when using Modified Matched S-Random (MMSR) interleaver. Furthermore, by designing a Chaotic Pseudo Random Interleaver (CPRI) as an outer interleaver at the source node instead of classical interleavers, our scheme can add more secure channel conditions
A Better Understanding of the Performance of Rate-1/2 Binary Turbo Codes that Use Odd-Even Interleavers
The effects of the odd-even constraint - as an interleaver design criterion -
on the performance of rate-1/2 binary turbo codes are revisited. According to
the current understanding, its adoption is favored because it makes the
information bits be uniformly protected, each one by its own parity bit. In
this paper, we provide instances that contradict this point of view suggesting
for a different explanation of the constraint's behavior, in terms of distance
spectrum
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
Turbo-Detected Unequal Error Protection Irregular Convolutional Codes Designed for the Wideband Advanced Multirate Speech Codec
Abstract—since the different bits of multimedia information, such as speech and video, have different error sensitivity, efficient unequalprotection channel coding schemes have to be used to ensure that the perceptually more important bits benefit from more powerful protection. Furthermore, in the context of turbo detection the channel codes should also match the characteristics of the channel for the sake of attaining a good convergence performance. In this paper, we address this design dilemma by using irregular convolutional codes (IRCCs) which constitute a family of different-rate subcodes. we benefit from the high design flexibility of IRCCs and hence excellent convergence properties are maintained while having unequal error protection capabilities matched to the requirements of the source. An EXIT chart based design procedure is proposed and used in the context of protecting the different-sensitivity speech bits of the wideband AMR speech codec. As a benefit, the unequalprotection system using IRCCs exhibits an SNR advantage of about 0.4dB over the equal-protection system employing regular convolutional codes, when communicating over a Gaussian channel
On Maximum Contention-Free Interleavers and Permutation Polynomials over Integer Rings
An interleaver is a critical component for the channel coding performance of
turbo codes. Algebraic constructions are of particular interest because they
admit analytical designs and simple, practical hardware implementation.
Contention-free interleavers have been recently shown to be suitable for
parallel decoding of turbo codes. In this correspondence, it is shown that
permutation polynomials generate maximum contention-free interleavers, i.e.,
every factor of the interleaver length becomes a possible degree of parallel
processing of the decoder. Further, it is shown by computer simulations that
turbo codes using these interleavers perform very well for the 3rd Generation
Partnership Project (3GPP) standard.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, submitted as a correspondence to the IEEE
Transactions on Information Theory, revised versio
Near-Capacity Turbo Trellis Coded Modulation Design
Bandwidth efficient parallel-concatenated Turbo Trellis Coded Modulation (TTCM) schemes were designed for communicating over uncorrelated Rayleigh fading channels. A symbol-based union bound was derived for analysing the error floor of the proposed TTCM schemes. A pair of In-phase (I) and Quadrature-phase (Q) interleavers were employed for interleaving the I and Q components of the TTCM coded symbols, in order to attain an increased diversity gain. The decoding convergence of the IQ-TTCM schemes was analysed using symbol based EXtrinsic Information Transfer (EXIT) charts. The best TTCM component codes were selected with the aid of both the symbol-based union bound and non-binary EXIT charts for the sake of designing capacity-approaching IQ-TTCM schemes in the context of 8PSK, 16QAM and 32QAM signal sets. It will be shown that our TTCM design is capable of approaching the channel capacity within 0.5 dB at a throughput of 4 bit/s/Hz, when communicating over uncorrelated Rayleigh fading channels using 32QAM
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