135,050 research outputs found
Channel Estimation for LEO Satellite Massive MIMO OFDM Communications
In this paper, we investigate the massive multiple-input multiple-output
orthogonal frequency division multiplexing channel estimation for
low-earth-orbit satellite communication systems. First, we use the angle-delay
domain channel to characterize the space-frequency domain channel. Then, we
show that the asymptotic minimum mean square error (MMSE) of the channel
estimation can be minimized if the array response vectors of the user terminals
(UTs) that use the same pilot are orthogonal. Inspired by this, we design an
efficient graph-based pilot allocation strategy to enhance the channel
estimation performance. In addition, we devise a novel two-stage channel
estimation (TSCE) approach, in which the received signals at the satellite are
manipulated with per-subcarrier space domain processing followed by per-user
frequency domain processing. Moreover, the space domain processing of each UT
is shown to be identical for all the subcarriers, and an asymptotically optimal
vector for the per-subcarrier space domain linear processing is derived. The
frequency domain processing can be efficiently implemented by means of the fast
Toeplitz system solver. Simulation results show that the proposed TSCE approach
can achieve a near performance to the MMSE estimation with much lower
complexity.Comment: accepted by IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communication
Encoding and processing of sensory information in neuronal spike trains
Recently, a statistical signal-processing technique has allowed the information carried by single spike trains of sensory neurons on time-varying stimuli to be characterized quantitatively in a variety of preparations. In weakly electric fish, its application to first-order sensory neurons encoding electric field amplitude (P-receptor afferents) showed that they convey accurate information on temporal modulations in a behaviorally relevant frequency range (<80 Hz). At the next stage of the electrosensory pathway (the electrosensory lateral line lobe, ELL), the information sampled by first-order neurons is used to extract upstrokes and downstrokes in the amplitude modulation waveform. By using signal-detection techniques, we determined that these temporal features are explicitly represented by short spike bursts of second-order neurons (ELL pyramidal cells). Our results suggest that the biophysical mechanism underlying this computation is of dendritic origin. We also investigated the accuracy with which upstrokes and downstrokes are encoded across two of the three somatotopic body maps of the ELL (centromedial and lateral). Pyramidal cells of the centromedial map, in particular I-cells, encode up- and downstrokes more reliably than those of the lateral map. This result correlates well with the significance of these temporal features for a particular behavior (the jamming avoidance response) as assessed by lesion experiments of the centromedial map
Statistical Mechanics and Visual Signal Processing
The nervous system solves a wide variety of problems in signal processing. In
many cases the performance of the nervous system is so good that it apporaches
fundamental physical limits, such as the limits imposed by diffraction and
photon shot noise in vision. In this paper we show how to use the language of
statistical field theory to address and solve problems in signal processing,
that is problems in which one must estimate some aspect of the environment from
the data in an array of sensors. In the field theory formulation the optimal
estimator can be written as an expectation value in an ensemble where the input
data act as external field. Problems at low signal-to-noise ratio can be solved
in perturbation theory, while high signal-to-noise ratios are treated with a
saddle-point approximation. These ideas are illustrated in detail by an example
of visual motion estimation which is chosen to model a problem solved by the
fly's brain. In this problem the optimal estimator has a rich structure,
adapting to various parameters of the environment such as the mean-square
contrast and the correlation time of contrast fluctuations. This structure is
in qualitative accord with existing measurements on motion sensitive neurons in
the fly's brain, and we argue that the adaptive properties of the optimal
estimator may help resolve conlficts among different interpretations of these
data. Finally we propose some crucial direct tests of the adaptive behavior.Comment: 34pp, LaTeX, PUPT-143
Detecting and Estimating Signals in Noisy Cable Structures, II: Information Theoretical Analysis
This is the second in a series of articles that seek to recast classical single-neuron biophysics in information-theoretical terms. Classical cable theory focuses on analyzing the voltage or current attenuation of a synaptic signal as it propagates from its dendritic input location to the spike initiation zone. On the other hand, we are interested in analyzing the amount of information lost about the signal in this process due to the presence of various noise sources distributed throughout the neuronal membrane. We use a stochastic version of the linear one-dimensional cable equation to derive closed-form expressions for the second-order moments of the fluctuations of the membrane potential associated with different membrane current noise sources: thermal noise, noise due to the random opening and closing of sodium and potassium channels, and noise due to the presence of “spontaneous” synaptic input.
We consider two different scenarios. In the signal estimation paradigm, the time course of the membrane potential at a location on the cable is used to reconstruct the detailed time course of a random, band-limited current injected some distance away. Estimation performance is characterized in terms of the coding fraction and the mutual information. In the signal detection paradigm, the membrane potential is used to determine whether a distant synaptic event occurred within a given observation interval. In the light of our analytical results, we speculate that the length of weakly active apical dendrites might be limited by the information loss due to the accumulated noise between distal synaptic input sites and the soma and that the presence of dendritic nonlinearities probably serves to increase dendritic information transfer
On Low-Resolution ADCs in Practical 5G Millimeter-Wave Massive MIMO Systems
Nowadays, millimeter-wave (mmWave) massive multiple-input multiple-output
(MIMO) systems is a favorable candidate for the fifth generation (5G) cellular
systems. However, a key challenge is the high power consumption imposed by its
numerous radio frequency (RF) chains, which may be mitigated by opting for
low-resolution analog-to-digital converters (ADCs), whilst tolerating a
moderate performance loss. In this article, we discuss several important issues
based on the most recent research on mmWave massive MIMO systems relying on
low-resolution ADCs. We discuss the key transceiver design challenges including
channel estimation, signal detector, channel information feedback and transmit
precoding. Furthermore, we introduce a mixed-ADC architecture as an alternative
technique of improving the overall system performance. Finally, the associated
challenges and potential implementations of the practical 5G mmWave massive
MIMO system {with ADC quantizers} are discussed.Comment: to appear in IEEE Communications Magazin
Advanced Algorithms for Satellite Communication Signal Processing
Dizertační práce je zaměřena na softwarově definované přijímače určené k úzkopásmové družicové komunikaci. Komunikační kanály družicových spojů zahrnujících komunikaci s hlubokým vesmírem jsou zatíženy vysokými úrovněmi šumu, typicky modelovaného AWGN, a silným Dopplerovým posuvem signálu způsobeným mimořádnou rychlostí pohybu objektu. Dizertační práce představuje možné postupy řešení výpočetně efektivní digitální downkonverze úzkopásmových signálů a systému odhadu kmitočtu nosné úzkopásmových signálů zatížených Dopplerovým posuvem v řádu násobků šířky pásma signálu. Popis navrhovaných algoritmů zahrnuje analytický postup jejich vývoje a tam, kde je to možné, i analytické hodnocení jejich chování. Algoritmy jsou modelovány v prostředí MATLAB Simulink a tyto modely jsou využity pro ověření vlastností simulacemi. Modely byly také využity k experimentálním testům na reálném signálu přijatém z družice PSAT v laboratoři experimentálních družic na ústavu radioelektroniky.The dissertation is focused on software defined receivers intended for narrowband satellite communication. The satellite communication channel including deep space communication suffers from a high level of noise, typically modeled by AWGN, and from a strong Doppler shift of a signal caused by the unprecedented speed of an object in motion. The dissertation shows possible approaches to the issues of computationally efficient digital downconversion of narrowband signals and the carrier frequency estimation of narrowband signals distorted by the Doppler shift in the order of multiples of the signal bandwidth. The description of the proposed algorithms includes an analytical approach of its development and, if possible, the analytical performance assessment. The algorithms are modeled in MATLAB Simulink and the models are used for validating the performance by the simulation. The models were also used for experimental tests on the real signal received from the PSAT satellite at the laboratory of experimental satellites at the department of radio electronics.
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