101,469 research outputs found
Coordination and Bargaining over the Gaussian Interference Channel
This work considers coordination and bargaining between two selfish users
over a Gaussian interference channel using game theory. The usual information
theoretic approach assumes full cooperation among users for codebook and rate
selection. In the scenario investigated here, each selfish user is willing to
coordinate its actions only when an incentive exists and benefits of
cooperation are fairly allocated. To improve communication rates, the two users
are allowed to negotiate for the use of a simple Han-Kobayashi type scheme with
fixed power split and conditions for which users have incentives to cooperate
are identified. The Nash bargaining solution (NBS) is used as a tool to get
fair information rates. The operating point is obtained as a result of an
optimization problem and compared with a TDM-based one in the literature.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Proceedings of IEEE ISIT201
Uplink CoMP under a Constrained Backhaul and Imperfect Channel Knowledge
Coordinated Multi-Point (CoMP) is known to be a key technology for next
generation mobile communications systems, as it allows to overcome the burden
of inter-cell interference. Especially in the uplink, it is likely that
interference exploitation schemes will be used in the near future, as they can
be used with legacy terminals and require no or little changes in
standardization. Major drawbacks, however, are the extent of additional
backhaul infrastructure needed, and the sensitivity to imperfect channel
knowledge. This paper jointly addresses both issues in a new framework
incorporating a multitude of proposed theoretical uplink CoMP concepts, which
are then put into perspective with practical CoMP algorithms. This
comprehensive analysis provides new insight into the potential usage of uplink
CoMP in next generation wireless communications systems.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications in February
201
Interference Management in Heterogeneous Networks with Blind Transmitters
Future multi-tier communication networks will require enhanced network
capacity and reduced overhead. In the absence of Channel State Information
(CSI) at the transmitters, Blind Interference Alignment (BIA) and Topological
Interference Management (TIM) can achieve optimal Degrees of Freedom (DoF),
minimising network's overhead. In addition, Non-Orthogonal Multiple Access
(NOMA) can increase the sum rate of the network, compared to orthogonal radio
access techniques currently adopted by 4G networks. Our contribution is two
interference management schemes, BIA and a hybrid TIM-NOMA scheme, employed in
heterogeneous networks by applying user-pairing and Kronecker Product
representation. BIA manages inter- and intra-cell interference by antenna
selection and appropriate message scheduling. The hybrid scheme manages
intra-cell interference based on NOMA and inter-cell interference based on TIM.
We show that both schemes achieve at least double the rate of TDMA. The hybrid
scheme always outperforms TDMA and BIA in terms of Degrees of Freedom (DoF).
Comparing the two proposed schemes, BIA achieves more DoF than TDMA under
certain restrictions, and provides better Bit-Error-Rate (BER) and sum rate
performance to macrocell users, whereas the hybrid scheme improves the
performance of femtocell users.Comment: 30 pages, 18 figure
Ergodic Interference Alignment
This paper develops a new communication strategy, ergodic interference
alignment, for the K-user interference channel with time-varying fading. At any
particular time, each receiver will see a superposition of the transmitted
signals plus noise. The standard approach to such a scenario results in each
transmitter-receiver pair achieving a rate proportional to 1/K its
interference-free ergodic capacity. However, given two well-chosen time
indices, the channel coefficients from interfering users can be made to exactly
cancel. By adding up these two observations, each receiver can obtain its
desired signal without any interference. If the channel gains have independent,
uniform phases, this technique allows each user to achieve at least 1/2 its
interference-free ergodic capacity at any signal-to-noise ratio. Prior
interference alignment techniques were only able to attain this performance as
the signal-to-noise ratio tended to infinity. Extensions are given for the case
where each receiver wants a message from more than one transmitter as well as
the "X channel" case (with two receivers) where each transmitter has an
independent message for each receiver. Finally, it is shown how to generalize
this strategy beyond Gaussian channel models. For a class of finite field
interference channels, this approach yields the ergodic capacity region.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figure, To appear in IEEE Transactions on Information
Theor
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