59,515 research outputs found
MmWave Massive MIMO Based Wireless Backhaul for 5G Ultra-Dense Network
Ultra-dense network (UDN) has been considered as a promising candidate for
future 5G network to meet the explosive data demand. To realize UDN, a
reliable, Gigahertz bandwidth, and cost-effective backhaul connecting
ultra-dense small-cell base stations (BSs) and macro-cell BS is prerequisite.
Millimeter-wave (mmWave) can provide the potential Gbps traffic for wireless
backhaul. Moreover, mmWave can be easily integrated with massive MIMO for the
improved link reliability. In this article, we discuss the feasibility of
mmWave massive MIMO based wireless backhaul for 5G UDN, and the benefits and
challenges are also addressed. Especially, we propose a digitally-controlled
phase-shifter network (DPSN) based hybrid precoding/combining scheme for mmWave
massive MIMO, whereby the low-rank property of mmWave massive MIMO channel
matrix is leveraged to reduce the required cost and complexity of transceiver
with a negligible performance loss. One key feature of the proposed scheme is
that the macro-cell BS can simultaneously support multiple small-cell BSs with
multiple streams for each smallcell BS, which is essentially different from
conventional hybrid precoding/combining schemes typically limited to
single-user MIMO with multiple streams or multi-user MIMO with single stream
for each user. Based on the proposed scheme, we further explore the fundamental
issues of developing mmWave massive MIMO for wireless backhaul, and the
associated challenges, insight, and prospect to enable the mmWave massive MIMO
based wireless backhaul for 5G UDN are discussed.Comment: This paper has been accepted by IEEE Wireless Communications
Magazine. This paper is related to 5G, ultra-dense network (UDN), millimeter
waves (mmWave) fronthaul/backhaul, massive MIMO, sparsity/low-rank property
of mmWave massive MIMO channels, sparse channel estimation, compressive
sensing (CS), hybrid digital/analog precoding/combining, and hybrid
beamforming. http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/stamp/stamp.jsp?tp=&arnumber=730653
Energy-Efficient Streaming Using Non-volatile Memory
The disk and the DRAM in a typical mobile system consume a significant fraction (up to 30%) of the total system energy. To save on storage energy, the DRAM should be small and the disk should be spun down for long periods of time. We show that this can be achieved for predominantly streaming workloads by connecting the disk to the DRAM via a large non-volatile memory (NVM). We refer to this as the NVM-based architecture (NVMBA); the conventional architecture with only a DRAM and a disk is referred to as DRAMBA. The NVM in the NVMBA acts as a traffic reshaper from the disk to the DRAM. The total system costs are balanced, since the cost increase due to adding the NVM is compensated by the decrease in DRAM cost. We analyze the energy saving of NVMBA, with NAND flash memory serving as NVM, relative to DRAMBA with respect to (1) the streaming demand, (2) the disk form factor, (3) the best-effort provision, and (4) the stream location on the disk. We present a worst-case analysis of the reliability of the disk drive and the flash memory, and show that a small flash capacity is sufficient to operate the system over a year at negligible cost. Disk lifetime is superior to flash, so that is of no concern
DSP Linearization for Millimeter-Wave All-Digital Receiver Array with Low-Resolution ADCs
Millimeter-wave (mmWave) communications and cell densification are the key
techniques for the future evolution of cellular systems beyond 5G. Although the
current mmWave radio designs are focused on hybrid digital and analog receiver
array architectures, the fully digital architecture is an appealing option due
to its flexibility and support for multi-user multiple-input multiple-output
(MIMO). In order to achieve reasonable power consumption and hardware cost, the
specifications of analog circuits are expected to be compromised, including the
resolution of analog-to-digital converter (ADC) and the linearity of
radio-frequency (RF) front end. Although the state-of-the-art studies focus on
the ADC, the nonlinearity can also lead to severe system performance
degradation when strong input signals introduce inter-modulation distortion
(IMD). The impact of RF nonlinearity becomes more severe with densely deployed
mmWave cells since signal sources closer to the receiver array are more likely
to occur. In this work, we design and analyze the digital IMD compensation
algorithm, and study the relaxation of the required linearity in the RF-chain.
We propose novel algorithms that jointly process digitized samples to recover
amplifier saturation, and relies on beam space operation which reduces the
computational complexity as compared to per-antenna IMD compensation.Comment: 2019 IEEE 20th International Workshop on Signal Processing Advances
in Wireless Communications (SPAWC
Learning Fast and Slow: PROPEDEUTICA for Real-time Malware Detection
In this paper, we introduce and evaluate PROPEDEUTICA, a novel methodology
and framework for efficient and effective real-time malware detection,
leveraging the best of conventional machine learning (ML) and deep learning
(DL) algorithms. In PROPEDEUTICA, all software processes in the system start
execution subjected to a conventional ML detector for fast classification. If a
piece of software receives a borderline classification, it is subjected to
further analysis via more performance expensive and more accurate DL methods,
via our newly proposed DL algorithm DEEPMALWARE. Further, we introduce delays
to the execution of software subjected to deep learning analysis as a way to
"buy time" for DL analysis and to rate-limit the impact of possible malware in
the system. We evaluated PROPEDEUTICA with a set of 9,115 malware samples and
877 commonly used benign software samples from various categories for the
Windows OS. Our results show that the false positive rate for conventional ML
methods can reach 20%, and for modern DL methods it is usually below 6%.
However, the classification time for DL can be 100X longer than conventional ML
methods. PROPEDEUTICA improved the detection F1-score from 77.54% (conventional
ML method) to 90.25%, and reduced the detection time by 54.86%. Further, the
percentage of software subjected to DL analysis was approximately 40% on
average. Further, the application of delays in software subjected to ML reduced
the detection time by approximately 10%. Finally, we found and discussed a
discrepancy between the detection accuracy offline (analysis after all traces
are collected) and on-the-fly (analysis in tandem with trace collection). Our
insights show that conventional ML and modern DL-based malware detectors in
isolation cannot meet the needs of efficient and effective malware detection:
high accuracy, low false positive rate, and short classification time.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figure
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