2,229 research outputs found
Estimation Diversity and Energy Efficiency in Distributed Sensing
Distributed estimation based on measurements from multiple wireless sensors
is investigated. It is assumed that a group of sensors observe the same
quantity in independent additive observation noises with possibly different
variances. The observations are transmitted using amplify-and-forward (analog)
transmissions over non-ideal fading wireless channels from the sensors to a
fusion center, where they are combined to generate an estimate of the observed
quantity. Assuming that the Best Linear Unbiased Estimator (BLUE) is used by
the fusion center, the equal-power transmission strategy is first discussed,
where the system performance is analyzed by introducing the concept of
estimation outage and estimation diversity, and it is shown that there is an
achievable diversity gain on the order of the number of sensors. The optimal
power allocation strategies are then considered for two cases: minimum
distortion under power constraints; and minimum power under distortion
constraints. In the first case, it is shown that by turning off bad sensors,
i.e., sensors with bad channels and bad observation quality, adaptive power
gain can be achieved without sacrificing diversity gain. Here, the adaptive
power gain is similar to the array gain achieved in Multiple-Input
Single-Output (MISO) multi-antenna systems when channel conditions are known to
the transmitter. In the second case, the sum power is minimized under
zero-outage estimation distortion constraint, and some related energy
efficiency issues in sensor networks are discussed.Comment: To appear at IEEE Transactions on Signal Processin
Power Allocation for Distributed BLUE Estimation with Full and Limited Feedback of CSI
This paper investigates the problem of adaptive power allocation for
distributed best linear unbiased estimation (BLUE) of a random parameter at the
fusion center (FC) of a wireless sensor network (WSN). An optimal
power-allocation scheme is proposed that minimizes the -norm of the vector
of local transmit powers, given a maximum variance for the BLUE estimator. This
scheme results in the increased lifetime of the WSN compared to similar
approaches that are based on the minimization of the sum of the local transmit
powers. The limitation of the proposed optimal power-allocation scheme is that
it requires the feedback of the instantaneous channel state information (CSI)
from the FC to local sensors, which is not practical in most applications of
large-scale WSNs. In this paper, a limited-feedback strategy is proposed that
eliminates this requirement by designing an optimal codebook for the FC using
the generalized Lloyd algorithm with modified distortion metrics. Each sensor
amplifies its analog noisy observation using a quantized version of its optimal
amplification gain, which is received by the FC and used to estimate the
unknown parameter.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, to appear at the IEEE Military Communications
Conference (MILCOM) 201
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