20,871 research outputs found
Compressed network coding vectors
In networks that employ network coding, two main approaches have been proposed in the literature to allow the receivers to recover the source information: (i) use of coding vectors, that keep track of the linear combinations the received packets contain, and (ii) subspace coding, that dispenses of the need to know the linear combinations, since information is conveyed from the choice of subspaces alone. Both these approaches impose the strong requirement that all source packets get potentially combined. We here present a third approach that relaxes this assumption, and is thus not a special case from either of the previous two. This relaxation allows to employ compressed coding vectors to efficiently convey the coding coefficients, without altering the operation of intermediate network nodes. We develop optimal designs for such vectors
Source and Physical-Layer Network Coding for Correlated Two-Way Relaying
In this paper, we study a half-duplex two-way relay channel (TWRC) with
correlated sources exchanging bidirectional information. In the case, when both
sources have the knowledge of correlation statistics, a source compression with
physical-layer network coding (SCPNC) scheme is proposed to perform the
distributed compression at each source node. When only the relay has the
knowledge of correlation statistics, we propose a relay compression with
physical-layer network coding (RCPNC) scheme to compress the bidirectional
messages at the relay. The closed-form block error rate (BLER) expressions of
both schemes are derived and verified through simulations. It is shown that the
proposed schemes achieve considerable improvements in both error performance
and throughput compared with the conventional non-compression scheme in
correlated two-way relay networks (CTWRNs).Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures. IET Communications, 201
Rate-Accuracy Trade-Off In Video Classification With Deep Convolutional Neural Networks
Advanced video classification systems decode video frames to derive the
necessary texture and motion representations for ingestion and analysis by
spatio-temporal deep convolutional neural networks (CNNs). However, when
considering visual Internet-of-Things applications, surveillance systems and
semantic crawlers of large video repositories, the video capture and the
CNN-based semantic analysis parts do not tend to be co-located. This
necessitates the transport of compressed video over networks and incurs
significant overhead in bandwidth and energy consumption, thereby significantly
undermining the deployment potential of such systems. In this paper, we
investigate the trade-off between the encoding bitrate and the achievable
accuracy of CNN-based video classification models that directly ingest
AVC/H.264 and HEVC encoded videos. Instead of retaining entire compressed video
bitstreams and applying complex optical flow calculations prior to CNN
processing, we only retain motion vector and select texture information at
significantly-reduced bitrates and apply no additional processing prior to CNN
ingestion. Based on three CNN architectures and two action recognition
datasets, we achieve 11%-94% saving in bitrate with marginal effect on
classification accuracy. A model-based selection between multiple CNNs
increases these savings further, to the point where, if up to 7% loss of
accuracy can be tolerated, video classification can take place with as little
as 3 kbps for the transport of the required compressed video information to the
system implementing the CNN models
- …