1,637 research outputs found
Unequal Error Protection Raptor Codes
We design Unequal Error Protection (UEP) Raptor codes with the UEP property provided by the precode part of Raptor codes which is usually a Low Density Parity Check (LDPC) code. Existing UEP Raptor codes apply the UEP property on the Luby transform (LT) code part of Raptor codes. This approach lowers the bit erasure rate (BER) of the more important bits (MIB) of the data decoded by the LT part of the decoder of Raptor code at the expense of degrading the BER performance of Less Important Bits (LIB), and hence the overall BER of the data passed from the LT part to the LDPC part of the decoder is higher compared to the case of using an Equal Error Protection (EEP) LT code. The proposed UEP Raptor code design has the structure of UEP LDPC code and EEP LT code so that it has the advantage of passing data blocks with lower BER from the LT code part to the LDPC code part of the decoder. This advantage is translated into improved performance in terms of required overhead and achieved BER on both the MIB bits and LIB bits of the decoded data compared to UEP Raptor codes applying the UEP property on the LT part. We propose two design schemes. The first combines a partially regular LDPC code which has UEP properties with an EEP LT code, and the second scheme uses two LDPC codes with different code rates in the precode part such that the MIB bits are encoded using the LDPC code with lower rate and the LT part is EEP. Simulations of both designs exhibit improved BER performance on both the MIB bits and LIB bits while consuming smaller overheads. The second design can be used to provide unequal protection for cases where the MIB bits comprise a fraction of more than 0.4 of the source data which is a case where UEP Raptor codes with UEP LT codes perform poorly
Terminated and Tailbiting Spatially-Coupled Codes with Optimized Bit Mappings for Spectrally Efficient Fiber-Optical Systems
We study the design of spectrally efficient fiber-optical communication
systems based on different spatially coupled (SC) forward error correction
(FEC) schemes. In particular, we optimize the allocation of the coded bits from
the FEC encoder to the modulation bits of the signal constellation. Two SC code
classes are considered. The codes in the first class are protograph-based
low-density parity-check (LDPC) codes which are decoded using iterative
soft-decision decoding. The codes in the second class are generalized LDPC
codes which are decoded using iterative hard-decision decoding. For both code
classes, the bit allocation is optimized for the terminated and tailbiting SC
cases based on a density evolution analysis. An optimized bit allocation can
significantly improve the performance of tailbiting SC codes codes over the
baseline sequential allocation, up to the point where they have a comparable
gap to capacity as their terminated counterparts, at a lower FEC overhead. For
the considered terminated SC codes, the optimization only results in marginal
performance improvements, suggesting that in this case a sequential allocation
is close to optimal.Comment: This paper has been accepted for publication in the IEEE/OSA Journal
of Lightwave Technolog
Gurafu hyogen o riyoshita ayamari teisei hoshiki no kosei ni kansuru kenkyu
制度:新 ; 報告番号:乙2221号 ; 学位の種類:博士(工学) ; 授与年月日:2009/3/24 ; 早大学位記番号:新508
Design Of Fountain Codes With Error Control
This thesis is focused on providing unequal error protection (uep) to two disjoint sources which are communicating to a comdestination via a comrelay by using distributed lt codes over a binary erasure channel (bec), and designing fountain codes with error control property by integrating lt codes with turbo codes over a binary input additive white gaussian noise (bi-awgn) channel. A simple yet efficient technique for decomposing the rsd into two entirely different degree distributions is developed and presented in this thesis. These two distributions are used to encode data symbols at the sources and the encoded symbols from the sources are selectively xored at the relay based on a suitable relay operation before the combined codeword is transmitted to the destination. By doing so, it is shown that the uep can be provided to these sources. The performance of lt codes over the awgn channel is well studied and presented in this thesis which indicates that these codes have weak error correction ability over the channel. But, errors introduced into individual symbols during the transmission of information over noisy channels need correction by some error correcting codes. Since it is found that lt codes alone are weak at correcting those errors, lt codes are integrated with turbo codes which are good error correcting codes. Therefore, the source data (symbols) are at first turbo encoded and then lt encoded and transmitted over the awgn channel. When the corrupted encoded symbols are received at receiver, lt decoding is conducted folloby turbo decoding. The overall performance of the integrated system is studied and presented in this thesis, which suggests that the errors left after lt decoding can be corrected to some extent by turbo decoder
ERROR CORRECTION CODE-BASED EMBEDDING IN ADAPTIVE RATE WIRELESS COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS
In this dissertation, we investigated the methods for development of embedded channels within error
correction mechanisms utilized to support adaptive rate communication systems. We developed an error
correction code-based embedding scheme suitable for application in modern wireless data communication
standards. We specifically implemented the scheme for both low-density parity check block codes and
binary convolutional codes. While error correction code-based information hiding has been previously
presented in literature, we sought to take advantage of the fact that these wireless systems have the ability to
change their modulation and coding rates in response to changing channel conditions. We utilized this
functionality to incorporate knowledge of the channel state into the scheme, which led to an increase in
embedding capacity. We conducted extensive simulations to establish the performance of our embedding
methodologies. Results from these simulations enabled the development of models to characterize the
behavior of the embedded channels and identify sources of distortion in the underlying communication
system. Finally, we developed expressions to define limitations on the capacity of these channels subject to
a variety of constraints, including the selected modulation type and coding rate of the communication
system, the current channel state, and the specific embedding implementation.Commander, United States NavyApproved for public release; distribution is unlimited
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