91 research outputs found

    Turbo space-time coded modulation : principle and performance analysis

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    A breakthrough in coding was achieved with the invention of turbo codes. Turbo codes approach Shannon capacity by displaying the properties of long random codes, yet allowing efficient decoding. Coding alone, however, cannot fully address the problem of multipath fading channel. Recent advances in information theory have revolutionized the traditional view of multipath channel as an impairment. New results show that high gains in capacity can be achieved through the use of multiple antennas at the transmitter and the receiver. To take advantage of these new results in information theory, it is necessary to devise methods that allow communication systems to operate close to the predicted capacity. One such method recently invented is space-time coding, which provides both coding gain and diversity advantage. In this dissertation, a new class of codes is proposed that extends the concept of turbo coding to include space-time encoders as constituent building blocks of turbo codes. The codes are referred to as turbo spacetime coded modulation (turbo-STCM). The motivation behind the turbo-STCM concept is to fuse the important properties of turbo and space-time codes into a unified design framework. A turbo-STCM encoder is proposed, which consists of two space-time codes in recursive systematic form concatenated in parallel. An iterative symbol-by-symbol maximum a posteriori algorithm operating in the log domain is developed for decoding turbo-STCM. The decoder employs two a posteriori probability (APP) computing modules concatenated in parallel; one module for each constituent code. The analysis of turbo-STCM is demonstrated through simulations and theoretical closed-form expressions. Simulation results are provided for 4-PSK and 8-PSK schemes over the Rayleigh block-fading channel. It is shown that the turbo-STCM scheme features full diversity and full coding rate. The significant gain can be obtained in performance over conventional space-time codes of similar complexity. The analytical union bound to the bit error probability is derived for turbo-STCM over the additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) and the Rayleigh block-fading channels. The bound makes it possible to express the performance analysis of turbo-STCM in terms of the properties of the constituent space-time codes. The union bound is demonstrated for 4-PSK and 8-PSK turbo-STCM with two transmit antennas and one/two receive antennas. Information theoretic bounds such as Shannon capacity, cutoff rate, outage capacity and the Fano bound, are computed for multiantenna systems over the AWGN and fading channels. These bounds are subsequently used as benchmarks for demonstrating the performance of turbo-STCM

    Self-concatenated coding for wireless communication systems

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    In this thesis, we have explored self-concatenated coding schemes that are designed for transmission over Additive White Gaussian Noise (AWGN) and uncorrelated Rayleigh fading channels. We designed both the symbol-based Self-ConcatenatedCodes considered using Trellis Coded Modulation (SECTCM) and bit-based Self- Concatenated Convolutional Codes (SECCC) using a Recursive Systematic Convolutional (RSC) encoder as constituent codes, respectively. The design of these codes was carried out with the aid of Extrinsic Information Transfer (EXIT) charts. The EXIT chart based design has been found an efficient tool in finding the decoding convergence threshold of the constituent codes. Additionally, in order to recover the information loss imposed by employing binary rather than non-binary schemes, a soft decision demapper was introduced in order to exchange extrinsic information withthe SECCC decoder. To analyse this information exchange 3D-EXIT chart analysis was invoked for visualizing the extrinsic information exchange between the proposed Iteratively Decoding aided SECCC and soft-decision demapper (SECCC-ID). Some of the proposed SECTCM, SECCC and SECCC-ID schemes perform within about 1 dB from the AWGN and Rayleigh fading channels’ capacity. A union bound analysis of SECCC codes was carried out to find the corresponding Bit Error Ratio (BER) floors. The union bound of SECCCs was derived for communications over both AWGN and uncorrelated Rayleigh fading channels, based on a novel interleaver concept.Application of SECCCs in both UltraWideBand (UWB) and state-of-the-art video-telephone schemes demonstrated its practical benefits.In order to further exploit the benefits of the low complexity design offered by SECCCs we explored their application in a distributed coding scheme designed for cooperative communications, where iterative detection is employed by exchanging extrinsic information between the decoders of SECCC and RSC at the destination. In the first transmission period of cooperation, the relay receives the potentially erroneous data and attempts to recover the information. The recovered information is then re-encoded at the relay using an RSC encoder. In the second transmission period this information is then retransmitted to the destination. The resultant symbols transmitted from the source and relay nodes can be viewed as the coded symbols of a three-component parallel-concatenated encoder. At the destination a Distributed Binary Self-Concatenated Coding scheme using Iterative Decoding (DSECCC-ID) was employed, where the two decoders (SECCC and RSC) exchange their extrinsic information. It was shown that the DSECCC-ID is a low-complexity scheme, yet capable of approaching the Discrete-input Continuous-output Memoryless Channels’s (DCMC) capacity.Finally, we considered coding schemes designed for two nodes communicating with each other with the aid of a relay node, where the relay receives information from the two nodes in the first transmission period. At the relay node we combine a powerful Superposition Coding (SPC) scheme with SECCC. It is assumed that decoding errors may be encountered at the relay node. The relay node then broadcasts this information in the second transmission period after re-encoding it, again, using a SECCC encoder. At the destination, the amalgamated block of Successive Interference Cancellation (SIC) scheme combined with SECCC then detects and decodes the signal either with or without the aid of a priori information. Our simulation results demonstrate that the proposed scheme is capable of reliably operating at a low BER for transmission over both AWGN and uncorrelated Rayleigh fading channels. We compare the proposed scheme’s performance to a direct transmission link between the two sources having the same throughput

    Space-Time Coding: an Overview

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    This work provides an overview of the fundamental aspects and of some recent advances in space-time coding (STC). Basic information theoretic results on Multiple-Input Multiple-Output (MIMO) fading channels, pertaining to capacity, diversity, and to the optimal Diversity-Multiplexing Tradeoff (DMT), are reviewed. The code design for the quasi-static, outage limited, fading channel is recognized as the most challenging and innovative with respect to traditional “Gaussian” coding. Then, a survey of STC constructions is presented. This culminates with the description of families of codes that are optimal with respect to the DMT criterion and have error performance that is very close to the information theoretic limits. The paper concludes with some important recent topics, including open problems in STC design

    Soft-output detection for transit antenna index modulation-based schemes.

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    Master of Sciences in Electronic Engineering. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 2016.Abstract available in PDF file

    Adventures With Rna Fish For Diagnosing Viral Infections And Exploring Single-Cell Heterogeneity In Cancer

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    Single-molecule RNA FISH is a robust method for visualizing individual molecules of RNA within intact cells that has been used extensively for describing single-cell hetero- geneity in gene expression. In this thesis, we leverage RNA FISH-based technologies for two major problems in biology and medicine: rapid detection of viral infections and understanding mechanisms of resistance to targeted therapy in cancer. Until recently, RNA FISH was not a viable technology for rapid diagnostics, as the hybridization process required a minimum of 6 hours. We start by presenting a modification to the RNA FISH protocol developed by Raj et al. 2008, that enables hybridization in only 5 minutes, and then use these improvements in hybridization time to develop RNA FISH for detection of respiratory viruses. We demonstrate that RNA FISH is capable of de- tecting influenza, rhinovirus, and adenovirus, and propose two probe design strategies with clinical value for discriminating viral strains and detecting many strains at once. Ultimately, we extend these techniques to discriminate single-base differences in the viral sequences, which is clinically useful as single-base mutations can render viruses resistant to our best antiviral medications. In the next section of this thesis, we use RNA FISH for another application: examining single-cell heterogeneity in cancer cells treated with targeted therapy. We first show that melanoma cells can display profound transcriptional variability at the single cell level that predicts which cells will ultimately resist drug. This variability involves infrequent, semi-coordinated transcription of a number of resistance markers at high levels in a very small percentage of cells. The addition of drug then induces an epigenetic reprogramming in these cells, converting the transient transcriptional state to a stably resistant state. This reprogramming is a progressive process consisting of a loss of SOX10-mediated differentiation followed by activation of new signaling pathways, partially mediated by activity of Jun-AP-1 and TEAD. Our work reveals the multistage nature of the acquisition of drug resistance and provides a framework for understanding resistance dynamics. Taken together, these two applications of RNA FISH show its generalizability for exploring many different questions in biology and clinical medicine

    Architectures multi-Asip pour turbo récepteur flexible

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    Rapidly evolving wireless standards use modern techniques such as turbo codes, Bit Interleaved coded Modulation (BICM), high order QAM constellation, Signal Space Diversity (SSD), Multi-Input Multi-Output (MIMO) Spatial Multiplexing (SM) and Space Time Codes (STC) with different parameters for reliable high rate data transmissions. Adoption of such techniques in the transmitter can impact the receiver architecture in three ways: (1) the complex processing related to advanced techniques such as turbo codes, encourage to perform iterative processing in the receiver to improve error rate performance (2) to satisfy high throughput requirement for an iterative receiver, parallel processing is mandatory and finally (3) to allow the support of different techniques and parameters imposed, programmable yet high throughput hardware processing elements are required. In this thesis, to address the high throughput requirement with turbo processing, first of all a study of parallelism on turbo decoding is extended for turbo demodulation and turbo equalization. Based on the results acquired from the parallelism study a flexible high throughput heterogeneous multi-ASIP NoC based unified turbo receiver is proposed. The proposed architecture fulfils the target requirements in a way that: (a) Application Specific Instruction-set Processor (ASIP) exploits metric generation level parallelism and implements the required flexibility, (b) throughputs beyond the capacity of single ASIP in a turbo process are achieved through multiple ASIP elements implementing sub-block parallelism and shuffled processing and finally (c) Network on Chip is used to handle communication conflicts during parallel processing of multiple ASIPs. In pursuit to achieve a hardware model of the proposed architecture two ASIPs are conceived where the first one, namely EquASIP, is dedicated for MMSE-IC equalization and provides a flexible solution for multiple MIMO techniques adopted in multiple wireless standards with a capability to work in turbo equalization context. The second ASIP, named as DemASIP, is a flexible demapper which can be used in MIMO or single antenna environment for any modulation till 256-QAM with or without iterative demodulation. Using available TurbASIP and NoC components, the thesis concludes on an FPGA prototype of heterogeneous multi-ASIP NoC based unified turbo receiver which integrates 9 instances of 3 different ASIPs with 2 NoCs.Les normes de communication sans fil, sans cesse en évolution, imposent l'utilisation de techniques modernes telles que les turbocodes, modulation codée à entrelacement bit (BICM), constellation MAQ d'ordre élevé, diversité de constellation (SSD), multiplexage spatial et codage espace-temps multi-antennes (MIMO) avec des paramètres différents pour des transmissions fiables et de haut débit. L'adoption de ces techniques dans l'émetteur peut influencer l'architecture du récepteur de trois façons: (1) les traitement complexes relatifs aux techniques avancées comme les turbocodes, encourage à effectuer un traitement itératif dans le récepteur pour améliorer la performance en termes de taux d'erreur (2) pour satisfaire l'exigence de haut débit avec un récepteur itératif, le recours au parallélisme est obligatoire et enfin (3) pour assurer le support des différentes techniques et paramètres imposées, des processeurs de traitement matériel flexibles, mais aussi de haute performance, sont nécessaires. Dans cette thèse, pour répondre aux besoins de haut débit dans un contexte de traitement itératif, tout d'abord une étude de parallélisme sur le turbo décodage a été étendue aux applications de turbo démodulation et turbo égalisation. Partant des résultats obtenus à partir de l'étude du parallélisme, un récepteur itératif unifié basé sur un modèle d'architecture multi-ASIP hétérogène intégrant un réseau sur puce (NoC) a été proposé. L'architecture proposée répond aux exigences visées d'une manière où: (a) le concept de processeur à jeu d'instruction dédié à l'application (ASIP) exploite le parallélisme du niveau de génération de métriques et met en oeuvre la flexibilité nécessaire, (b) les débits au-delà de la capacité d'un seul ASIP dans un processus itératif sont obtenus au moyen de multiples ASIP implémentant le parallélisme de sous-blocs et le traitement combiné et enfin (c) le concept de réseau sur puce (NoC) est utilisé pour gérer les conflits de communication au cours du traitement parallèle itératif multi-ASIP. Dans le but de parvenir à un modèle matériel de l'architecture proposée, deux ASIP ont été conçus où le premier, nommé EquASIP, est dédié à l'égalisation MMSE-IC et fournit une solution flexible pour de multiples techniques multi-antennes adoptés dans plusieurs normes sans fil avec la capacité de travailler dans un contexte de turbo égalisation. Le deuxième ASIP, nommé DemASIP, est un démappeur flexible qui peut être utilisé dans un environnement multi-antennes et pour tout type de modulation jusqu'à MAQ-256 avec ou sans démodulation itérative. En intégrant ces ASIP, en plus des NoC et TurbASIP disponibles à Télécom Bretagne, la thèse conclut sur un prototype FPGA d'un récepteur itératif unifié multi-ASIP qui intègre 9 coeurs de 3 différents types d'ASIP avec 2 NoC
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