871 research outputs found
HARQ Buffer Management: An Information-Theoretic View
A key practical constraint on the design of Hybrid automatic repeat request
(HARQ) schemes is the size of the on-chip buffer that is available at the
receiver to store previously received packets. In fact, in modern wireless
standards such as LTE and LTE-A, the HARQ buffer size is one of the main
drivers of the modem area and power consumption. This has recently highlighted
the importance of HARQ buffer management, that is, of the use of buffer-aware
transmission schemes and of advanced compression policies for the storage of
received data. This work investigates HARQ buffer management by leveraging
information-theoretic achievability arguments based on random coding.
Specifically, standard HARQ schemes, namely Type-I, Chase Combining and
Incremental Redundancy, are first studied under the assumption of a
finite-capacity HARQ buffer by considering both coded modulation, via Gaussian
signaling, and Bit Interleaved Coded Modulation (BICM). The analysis sheds
light on the impact of different compression strategies, namely the
conventional compression log-likelihood ratios and the direct digitization of
baseband signals, on the throughput. Then, coding strategies based on layered
modulation and optimized coding blocklength are investigated, highlighting the
benefits of HARQ buffer-aware transmission schemes. The optimization of
baseband compression for multiple-antenna links is also studied, demonstrating
the optimality of a transform coding approach.Comment: submitted to IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory
(ISIT) 2015. 29 pages, 12 figures, submitted to journal publicatio
Self-concatenated coding and multi-functional MIMO aided H.264 video telephony
Abstract— Robust video transmission using iteratively detected Self-Concatenated Coding (SCC), multi-dimensional Sphere Packing (SP) modulation and Layered Steered Space-Time Coding (LSSTC) is proposed for H.264 coded video transmission over correlated Rayleigh fading channels. The self-concatenated convolutional coding (SECCC) scheme is composed of a Recursive Systematic Convolutional (RSC) code and an interleaver, which is used to randomise the extrinsic information exchanged between the self-concatenated constituent RSC codes. Additionally, a puncturer is employed for improving the achievable bandwidth efficiency. The convergence behaviour of the MIMO transceiver advocated is investigated with the aid of Extrinsic Information Transfer (EXIT) charts. The proposed system exhibits an Eb /N0 gain of about 9 dB at the PSNR degradation point of 1 dB in comparison to the identical-rate benchmarker scheme
Geometrical relations between space time block code designs and complexity reduction
In this work, the geometric relation between space time block code design for
the coherent channel and its non-coherent counterpart is exploited to get an
analogue of the information theoretic inequality in
terms of diversity. It provides a lower bound on the performance of
non-coherent codes when used in coherent scenarios. This leads in turn to a
code design decomposition result splitting coherent code design into two
complexity reduced sub tasks. Moreover a geometrical criterion for high
performance space time code design is derived.Comment: final version, 11 pages, two-colum
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