9 research outputs found

    Error Performance of Channel Coding in Random Access Communication

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    A new channel coding approach was proposed in [1] for random multiple access communication over the discrete-time memoryless channel. The coding approach allows users to choose their communication rates independently without sharing the rate information among each other or with the receiver. The receiver will either decode the message or report a collision depending on whether reliable message recovery is possible. It was shown that, asymptotically as the codeword length goes to infinity, the set of communication rates supporting reliable message recovery can be characterized by an achievable region which equals Shannon's information rate region possibly without a convex hull operation. In this paper, we derive achievable bounds on error probabilities, including the decoding error probability and the collision miss detection probability, of random multiple access systems with a finite codeword length. Achievable error exponents are obtained by taking the codeword length to infinity.Comment: submitted to IEEE Transactions on Information Theor

    Medium Access Control Game with An Enhanced

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    Abstract-We consider distributed medium access control in a wireless network where each link layer user (transmitter) is equipped with multiple transmission options as opposed to the classical binary options of transmitting/idling. In each time slot, a user randomly chooses a transmission option according to a "transmission probability vector". Packets sent by the users are either received or lost depending on whether reliable decoding is supported by the communication channel. We propose a game theoretic model for distributed medium access control where each user adapts its transmission probability vector to maximize a utility function. Condition under which the medium access control game has a unique Nash equilibrium is obtained. Simulation results show that, when multiple transmission options are provided, users in a distributed network tend to converge to channel sharing schemes that are consistent with the well-known information theoretic understandings

    Channel coding for network communication: an information theoretic perspective

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    2011 Fall.Includes bibliographical references.Channel coding helps a communication system to combat noise and interference by adding "redundancy" to the source message. Theoretical fundamentals of channel coding in point-to-point systems have been intensively studied in the research area of information theory, which was proposed by Claude Shannon in his celebrated work in 1948. A set of landmark results have been developed to characterize the performance limitations in terms of the rate and the reliability tradeoff bounds. However, unlike its success in point-to-point systems, information theory has not yielded as rich results in network communication, which has been a key research focus over the past two decades. Due to the limitations posed by some of the key assumptions in classical information theory, network information theory is far from being mature and complete. For example, the classical information theoretic model assumes that communication parameters such as the information rate should be jointly determined by all transmitters and receivers. Communication should be carried out continuously over a long time such that the overhead of communication coordination becomes negligible. The communication channel should be stationary in order for the coding scheme to transform the channel noise randomness into deterministic statistics. These assumptions are valid in a point-to-point system, but they do not permit an extensive application of channel coding in network systems because they have essentially ignored the dynamic nature of network communication. Network systems deal with bursty message transmissions between highly dynamic users. For various reasons, joint determination of key communication parameters before message transmission is often infeasible or expensive. Communication channels can often be non-stationary due to the dynamic communication interference generated by the network users. The objective of this work is to extend information theory toward network communication scenarios. We develop new channel coding results, in terms of the communication rate and error performance tradeoff, for several non-classical communication models, in which key assumptions made in classical channel coding are dropped or revised
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