3,158 research outputs found
Gossip Algorithms for Distributed Signal Processing
Gossip algorithms are attractive for in-network processing in sensor networks
because they do not require any specialized routing, there is no bottleneck or
single point of failure, and they are robust to unreliable wireless network
conditions. Recently, there has been a surge of activity in the computer
science, control, signal processing, and information theory communities,
developing faster and more robust gossip algorithms and deriving theoretical
performance guarantees. This article presents an overview of recent work in the
area. We describe convergence rate results, which are related to the number of
transmitted messages and thus the amount of energy consumed in the network for
gossiping. We discuss issues related to gossiping over wireless links,
including the effects of quantization and noise, and we illustrate the use of
gossip algorithms for canonical signal processing tasks including distributed
estimation, source localization, and compression.Comment: Submitted to Proceedings of the IEEE, 29 page
Robust Location-Aided Beam Alignment in Millimeter Wave Massive MIMO
Location-aided beam alignment has been proposed recently as a potential
approach for fast link establishment in millimeter wave (mmWave) massive MIMO
(mMIMO) communications. However, due to mobility and other imperfections in the
estimation process, the spatial information obtained at the base station (BS)
and the user (UE) is likely to be noisy, degrading beam alignment performance.
In this paper, we introduce a robust beam alignment framework in order to
exhibit resilience with respect to this problem. We first recast beam alignment
as a decentralized coordination problem where BS and UE seek coordination on
the basis of correlated yet individual position information. We formulate the
optimum beam alignment solution as the solution of a Bayesian team decision
problem. We then propose a suite of algorithms to approach optimality with
reduced complexity. The effectiveness of the robust beam alignment procedure,
compared with classical designs, is then verified on simulation settings with
varying location information accuracies.Comment: 24 pages, 7 figures. The short version of this paper has been
accepted to IEEE Globecom 201
A Decentralized Mobile Computing Network for Multi-Robot Systems Operations
Collective animal behaviors are paradigmatic examples of fully decentralized
operations involving complex collective computations such as collective turns
in flocks of birds or collective harvesting by ants. These systems offer a
unique source of inspiration for the development of fault-tolerant and
self-healing multi-robot systems capable of operating in dynamic environments.
Specifically, swarm robotics emerged and is significantly growing on these
premises. However, to date, most swarm robotics systems reported in the
literature involve basic computational tasks---averages and other algebraic
operations. In this paper, we introduce a novel Collective computing framework
based on the swarming paradigm, which exhibits the key innate features of
swarms: robustness, scalability and flexibility. Unlike Edge computing, the
proposed Collective computing framework is truly decentralized and does not
require user intervention or additional servers to sustain its operations. This
Collective computing framework is applied to the complex task of collective
mapping, in which multiple robots aim at cooperatively map a large area. Our
results confirm the effectiveness of the cooperative strategy, its robustness
to the loss of multiple units, as well as its scalability. Furthermore, the
topology of the interconnecting network is found to greatly influence the
performance of the collective action.Comment: Accepted for Publication in Proc. 9th IEEE Annual Ubiquitous
Computing, Electronics & Mobile Communication Conferenc
Geographic Gossip: Efficient Averaging for Sensor Networks
Gossip algorithms for distributed computation are attractive due to their
simplicity, distributed nature, and robustness in noisy and uncertain
environments. However, using standard gossip algorithms can lead to a
significant waste in energy by repeatedly recirculating redundant information.
For realistic sensor network model topologies like grids and random geometric
graphs, the inefficiency of gossip schemes is related to the slow mixing times
of random walks on the communication graph. We propose and analyze an
alternative gossiping scheme that exploits geographic information. By utilizing
geographic routing combined with a simple resampling method, we demonstrate
substantial gains over previously proposed gossip protocols. For regular graphs
such as the ring or grid, our algorithm improves standard gossip by factors of
and respectively. For the more challenging case of random
geometric graphs, our algorithm computes the true average to accuracy
using radio
transmissions, which yields a factor improvement over
standard gossip algorithms. We illustrate these theoretical results with
experimental comparisons between our algorithm and standard methods as applied
to various classes of random fields.Comment: To appear, IEEE Transactions on Signal Processin
Greedy Gossip with Eavesdropping
This paper presents greedy gossip with eavesdropping (GGE), a novel
randomized gossip algorithm for distributed computation of the average
consensus problem. In gossip algorithms, nodes in the network randomly
communicate with their neighbors and exchange information iteratively. The
algorithms are simple and decentralized, making them attractive for wireless
network applications. In general, gossip algorithms are robust to unreliable
wireless conditions and time varying network topologies. In this paper we
introduce GGE and demonstrate that greedy updates lead to rapid convergence. We
do not require nodes to have any location information. Instead, greedy updates
are made possible by exploiting the broadcast nature of wireless
communications. During the operation of GGE, when a node decides to gossip,
instead of choosing one of its neighbors at random, it makes a greedy
selection, choosing the node which has the value most different from its own.
In order to make this selection, nodes need to know their neighbors' values.
Therefore, we assume that all transmissions are wireless broadcasts and nodes
keep track of their neighbors' values by eavesdropping on their communications.
We show that the convergence of GGE is guaranteed for connected network
topologies. We also study the rates of convergence and illustrate, through
theoretical bounds and numerical simulations, that GGE consistently outperforms
randomized gossip and performs comparably to geographic gossip on
moderate-sized random geometric graph topologies.Comment: 25 pages, 7 figure
Distributed Learning with Infinitely Many Hypotheses
We consider a distributed learning setup where a network of agents
sequentially access realizations of a set of random variables with unknown
distributions. The network objective is to find a parametrized distribution
that best describes their joint observations in the sense of the
Kullback-Leibler divergence. Apart from recent efforts in the literature, we
analyze the case of countably many hypotheses and the case of a continuum of
hypotheses. We provide non-asymptotic bounds for the concentration rate of the
agents' beliefs around the correct hypothesis in terms of the number of agents,
the network parameters, and the learning abilities of the agents. Additionally,
we provide a novel motivation for a general set of distributed Non-Bayesian
update rules as instances of the distributed stochastic mirror descent
algorithm.Comment: Submitted to CDC201
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