20,311 research outputs found
Compressive Measurement Designs for Estimating Structured Signals in Structured Clutter: A Bayesian Experimental Design Approach
This work considers an estimation task in compressive sensing, where the goal
is to estimate an unknown signal from compressive measurements that are
corrupted by additive pre-measurement noise (interference, or clutter) as well
as post-measurement noise, in the specific setting where some (perhaps limited)
prior knowledge on the signal, interference, and noise is available. The
specific aim here is to devise a strategy for incorporating this prior
information into the design of an appropriate compressive measurement strategy.
Here, the prior information is interpreted as statistics of a prior
distribution on the relevant quantities, and an approach based on Bayesian
Experimental Design is proposed. Experimental results on synthetic data
demonstrate that the proposed approach outperforms traditional random
compressive measurement designs, which are agnostic to the prior information,
as well as several other knowledge-enhanced sensing matrix designs based on
more heuristic notions.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication at The Asilomar
Conference on Signals, Systems, and Computers 201
Measurement Matrix Design for Compressive Sensing Based MIMO Radar
In colocated multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) radar using compressive
sensing (CS), a receive node compresses its received signal via a linear
transformation, referred to as measurement matrix. The samples are subsequently
forwarded to a fusion center, where an L1-optimization problem is formulated
and solved for target information. CS-based MIMO radar exploits the target
sparsity in the angle-Doppler-range space and thus achieves the high
localization performance of traditional MIMO radar but with many fewer
measurements. The measurement matrix is vital for CS recovery performance. This
paper considers the design of measurement matrices that achieve an optimality
criterion that depends on the coherence of the sensing matrix (CSM) and/or
signal-to-interference ratio (SIR). The first approach minimizes a performance
penalty that is a linear combination of CSM and the inverse SIR. The second one
imposes a structure on the measurement matrix and determines the parameters
involved so that the SIR is enhanced. Depending on the transmit waveforms, the
second approach can significantly improve SIR, while maintaining CSM comparable
to that of the Gaussian random measurement matrix (GRMM). Simulations indicate
that the proposed measurement matrices can improve detection accuracy as
compared to a GRMM
Sparse Signal Processing Concepts for Efficient 5G System Design
As it becomes increasingly apparent that 4G will not be able to meet the
emerging demands of future mobile communication systems, the question what
could make up a 5G system, what are the crucial challenges and what are the key
drivers is part of intensive, ongoing discussions. Partly due to the advent of
compressive sensing, methods that can optimally exploit sparsity in signals
have received tremendous attention in recent years. In this paper we will
describe a variety of scenarios in which signal sparsity arises naturally in 5G
wireless systems. Signal sparsity and the associated rich collection of tools
and algorithms will thus be a viable source for innovation in 5G wireless
system design. We will discribe applications of this sparse signal processing
paradigm in MIMO random access, cloud radio access networks, compressive
channel-source network coding, and embedded security. We will also emphasize
important open problem that may arise in 5G system design, for which sparsity
will potentially play a key role in their solution.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in IEEE Acces
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