432 research outputs found
The Multi-way Relay Channel
The multiuser communication channel, in which multiple users exchange
information with the help of a relay terminal, termed the multi-way relay
channel (mRC), is introduced. In this model, multiple interfering clusters of
users communicate simultaneously, where the users within the same cluster wish
to exchange messages among themselves. It is assumed that the users cannot
receive each other's signals directly, and hence the relay terminal in this
model is the enabler of communication. In particular, restricted encoders,
which ignore the received channel output and use only the corresponding
messages for generating the channel input, are considered. Achievable rate
regions and an outer bound are characterized for the Gaussian mRC, and their
comparison is presented in terms of exchange rates in a symmetric Gaussian
network scenario. It is shown that the compress-and-forward (CF) protocol
achieves exchange rates within a constant bit offset of the exchange capacity
independent of the power constraints of the terminals in the network. A finite
bit gap between the exchange rates achieved by the CF and the
amplify-and-forward (AF) protocols is also shown. The two special cases of the
mRC, the full data exchange model, in which every user wants to receive
messages of all other users, and the pairwise data exchange model which
consists of multiple two-way relay channels, are investigated in detail. In
particular for the pairwise data exchange model, in addition to the proposed
random coding based achievable schemes, a nested lattice coding based scheme is
also presented and is shown to achieve exchange rates within a constant bit gap
of the exchange capacity.Comment: Revised version of our submission to the Transactions on Information
Theor
Code designs for MIMO broadcast channels
Recent information-theoretic results show the optimality of dirty-paper coding (DPC) in achieving the full capacity region of the Gaussian multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) broadcast channel (BC). This paper presents a DPC based code design for BCs. We consider the case in which there is an individual rate/signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR) constraint for each user. For a fixed transmitter power, we choose the linear transmit precoding matrix such that the SINRs at users are uniformly maximized, thus ensuring the best bit-error rate performance. We start with Cover's simplest two-user Gaussian BC and present a coding scheme that operates 1.44 dB from the boundary of the capacity region at the rate of one bit per real sample (b/s) for each user. We then extend the coding strategy to a two-user MIMO Gaussian BC with two transmit antennas at the base-station and develop the first limit-approaching code design using nested turbo codes for DPC. At the rate of 1 b/s for each user, our design operates 1.48 dB from the capacity region boundary. We also consider the performance of our scheme over a slow fading BC. For two transmit antennas, simulation results indicate a performance loss of only 1.4 dB, 1.64 dB and 1.99 dB from the theoretical limit in terms of the total transmission power for the two, three and four user case, respectively
Rate Splitting for MIMO Wireless Networks: A Promising PHY-Layer Strategy for LTE Evolution
MIMO processing plays a central part towards the recent increase in spectral
and energy efficiencies of wireless networks. MIMO has grown beyond the
original point-to-point channel and nowadays refers to a diverse range of
centralized and distributed deployments. The fundamental bottleneck towards
enormous spectral and energy efficiency benefits in multiuser MIMO networks
lies in a huge demand for accurate channel state information at the transmitter
(CSIT). This has become increasingly difficult to satisfy due to the increasing
number of antennas and access points in next generation wireless networks
relying on dense heterogeneous networks and transmitters equipped with a large
number of antennas. CSIT inaccuracy results in a multi-user interference
problem that is the primary bottleneck of MIMO wireless networks. Looking
backward, the problem has been to strive to apply techniques designed for
perfect CSIT to scenarios with imperfect CSIT. In this paper, we depart from
this conventional approach and introduce the readers to a promising strategy
based on rate-splitting. Rate-splitting relies on the transmission of common
and private messages and is shown to provide significant benefits in terms of
spectral and energy efficiencies, reliability and CSI feedback overhead
reduction over conventional strategies used in LTE-A and exclusively relying on
private message transmissions. Open problems, impact on standard specifications
and operational challenges are also discussed.Comment: accepted to IEEE Communication Magazine, special issue on LTE
Evolutio
Decentralized sequential change detection using physical layer fusion
The problem of decentralized sequential detection with conditionally
independent observations is studied. The sensors form a star topology with a
central node called fusion center as the hub. The sensors make noisy
observations of a parameter that changes from an initial state to a final state
at a random time where the random change time has a geometric distribution. The
sensors amplify and forward the observations over a wireless Gaussian multiple
access channel and operate under either a power constraint or an energy
constraint. The optimal transmission strategy at each stage is shown to be the
one that maximizes a certain Ali-Silvey distance between the distributions for
the hypotheses before and after the change. Simulations demonstrate that the
proposed analog technique has lower detection delays when compared with
existing schemes. Simulations further demonstrate that the energy-constrained
formulation enables better use of the total available energy than the
power-constrained formulation in the change detection problem.Comment: 10 pages, two-column, 10 figures, revised based on feedback from
reviewers, accepted for publication in IEEE Trans. on Wireless Communication
Downlink SDMA with Limited Feedback in Interference-Limited Wireless Networks
The tremendous capacity gains promised by space division multiple access
(SDMA) depend critically on the accuracy of the transmit channel state
information. In the broadcast channel, even without any network interference,
it is known that such gains collapse due to interstream interference if the
feedback is delayed or low rate. In this paper, we investigate SDMA in the
presence of interference from many other simultaneously active transmitters
distributed randomly over the network. In particular we consider zero-forcing
beamforming in a decentralized (ad hoc) network where each receiver provides
feedback to its respective transmitter. We derive closed-form expressions for
the outage probability, network throughput, transmission capacity, and average
achievable rate and go on to quantify the degradation in network performance
due to residual self-interference as a function of key system parameters. One
particular finding is that as in the classical broadcast channel, the per-user
feedback rate must increase linearly with the number of transmit antennas and
SINR (in dB) for the full multiplexing gains to be preserved with limited
feedback. We derive the throughput-maximizing number of streams, establishing
that single-stream transmission is optimal in most practically relevant
settings. In short, SDMA does not appear to be a prudent design choice for
interference-limited wireless networks.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communication
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