6,375 research outputs found
Capacity Bounds for a Class of Interference Relay Channels
The capacity of a class of Interference Relay Channels (IRC) -the Injective
Semideterministic IRC where the relay can only observe one of the sources- is
investigated. We first derive a novel outer bound and two inner bounds which
are based on a careful use of each of the available cooperative strategies
together with the adequate interference decoding technique. The outer bound
extends Telatar and Tse's work while the inner bounds contain several known
results in the literature as special cases. Our main result is the
characterization of the capacity region of the Gaussian class of IRCs studied
within a fixed number of bits per dimension -constant gap. The proof relies on
the use of the different cooperative strategies in specific SNR regimes due to
the complexity of the schemes. As a matter of fact, this issue reveals the
complex nature of the Gaussian IRC where the combination of a single coding
scheme for the Gaussian relay and interference channel may not lead to a good
coding scheme for this problem, even when the focus is only on capacity to
within a constant gap over all possible fading statistics.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figures. Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Information
Theory (revised version
Bilayer Low-Density Parity-Check Codes for Decode-and-Forward in Relay Channels
This paper describes an efficient implementation of binning for the relay
channel using low-density parity-check (LDPC) codes. We devise bilayer LDPC
codes to approach the theoretically promised rate of the decode-and-forward
relaying strategy by incorporating relay-generated information bits in
specially designed bilayer graphical code structures. While conventional LDPC
codes are sensitively tuned to operate efficiently at a certain channel
parameter, the proposed bilayer LDPC codes are capable of working at two
different channel parameters and two different rates: that at the relay and at
the destination. To analyze the performance of bilayer LDPC codes, bilayer
density evolution is devised as an extension of the standard density evolution
algorithm. Based on bilayer density evolution, a design methodology is
developed for the bilayer codes in which the degree distribution is iteratively
improved using linear programming. Further, in order to approach the
theoretical decode-and-forward rate for a wide range of channel parameters,
this paper proposes two different forms bilayer codes, the bilayer-expurgated
and bilayer-lengthened codes. It is demonstrated that a properly designed
bilayer LDPC code can achieve an asymptotic infinite-length threshold within
0.24 dB gap to the Shannon limits of two different channels simultaneously for
a wide range of channel parameters. By practical code construction,
finite-length bilayer codes are shown to be able to approach within a 0.6 dB
gap to the theoretical decode-and-forward rate of the relay channel at a block
length of and a bit-error probability (BER) of . Finally, it is
demonstrated that a generalized version of the proposed bilayer code
construction is applicable to relay networks with multiple relays.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Trans. Info. Theor
Incremental Relaying for the Gaussian Interference Channel with a Degraded Broadcasting Relay
This paper studies incremental relay strategies for a two-user Gaussian
relay-interference channel with an in-band-reception and
out-of-band-transmission relay, where the link between the relay and the two
receivers is modelled as a degraded broadcast channel. It is shown that
generalized hash-and-forward (GHF) can achieve the capacity region of this
channel to within a constant number of bits in a certain weak relay regime,
where the transmitter-to-relay link gains are not unboundedly stronger than the
interference links between the transmitters and the receivers. The GHF relaying
strategy is ideally suited for the broadcasting relay because it can be
implemented in an incremental fashion, i.e., the relay message to one receiver
is a degraded version of the message to the other receiver. A
generalized-degree-of-freedom (GDoF) analysis in the high signal-to-noise ratio
(SNR) regime reveals that in the symmetric channel setting, each common relay
bit can improve the sum rate roughly by either one bit or two bits
asymptotically depending on the operating regime, and the rate gain can be
interpreted as coming solely from the improvement of the common message rates,
or alternatively in the very weak interference regime as solely coming from the
rate improvement of the private messages. Further, this paper studies an
asymmetric case in which the relay has only a single single link to one of the
destinations. It is shown that with only one relay-destination link, the
approximate capacity region can be established for a larger regime of channel
parameters. Further, from a GDoF point of view, the sum-capacity gain due to
the relay can now be thought as coming from either signal relaying only, or
interference forwarding only.Comment: To appear in IEEE Trans. on Inf. Theor
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