341 research outputs found

    機械学習を用いたコグニティブ無線における変調方式識別に関する研究

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    The current spectrum allocation cannot satisfy the demand for future wireless communications, which prompts extensive studies in search of feasible solutions for the spectrum scarcity. The burden in terms of the spectral efficiency on the radio frequency terminal is intended to be small by cognitive radio (CR) systems that prefer low power transmission, changeable carrier frequencies, and diverse modulation schemes. However, the recent surge in the application of the CR has been accompanied by an indispensable component: the spectrum sensing, to avoid interference towards the primary user. This requirement leads to a complex strategy for sensing and transmission and an increased demand for signal processing at the secondary user. However, the performance of the spectrum sensing can be extended by a robust modulation classification (MC) scheme to distinguish between a primary user and a secondary user along with the interference identification. For instance, the underlying paradigm that enables a concurrent transmission of the primary and secondary links may need a precise measure of the interference that the secondary users cause to the primary users. An adjustment to the transmission power should be made, if there is a change in the modulation of the primary users, implying a noise oor excess at the primary user location; else, the primary user will be subject to interference and a collision may occur.Alternatively, the interweave paradigm that progresses the spectrum efficiency by reusing the allocated spectrum over a temporary space, requires a classification of the intercepted signal into primary and secondary systems. Moreover, a distinction between noise and interference can be accomplished by modulation classification, if spectrum sensing is impossible. Therefore, modulation classification has been a fruitful area of study for over three decades.In this thesis, the modulation classification algorithms using machine learning are investigated while new methods are proposed. Firstly, a supervised machine learning based modulation classification algorithm is proposed. The higher-order cumulants are selected as features, due to its robustness to noise. Stacked denoising autoencoders,which is an extended edition of the neural network, is chosen as the classifier. On one hand stacked pre-train overcomes the shortcoming of local optimization, on the other, denoising function further enhances the anti-noise performance. The performance of this method is compared with the conventional methods in terms of the classification accuracy and execution speed. Secondly, an unsupervised machine learning based modulation classification algorithm is proposed.The features from time-frequency distribution are extracted. Density-based spatial clustering of applications with noise (DBSCAN) is used as the classifier because it is impossible to decide the number of clusters in advance. The simulation reveals that this method has higher classification accuracy than the conventional methods. Moreover, the training phase is unnecessary for this method. Therefore, it has higher workability then supervised method. Finally, the advantages and dis-advantages of them are summarized.For the future work, algorithm optimization is still a challenging task, because the computation capability of hardware is limited. On one hand, for the supervised machine learning, GPU computation is a potential solution for supervised machine learning, to reduce the execution cost. Altering the modulation pool, the network structure has to be redesigned as well. On the other hand, for the unsupervised machine learning, that shifting the symbols to carrier frequency consumes extra computing resources.電気通信大学201

    Application of machine learning techniques and empirical mode decomposition for the classification of analog modulated signals

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    <w:PermStart w:id="205147274" w:edGrp="everyone"/>In this article, an automatic Analog Modulation Classifier based on Empirical mode decomposition and Machine learning approaches (AMC-EM) is proposed. The AMC-EM operates without a priori information and can recognise typical analog modulation schemes: amplitude modulation, phase modulation, frequency modulation, and single sideband modulation. The AMC-EM uses Empirical Mode Decomposition (EMD) to evaluate the features of the signal for the successive classification by using Machine Learning (ML). In the design of the AMC-EM, the selection of the specific ML technique is performed by comparing, with numerical tests, the performance of the (i) Support Vector Machine (SVM), (ii) k-nearest neighbor classifier, and (iii) adaptive boosting, since they are commonly used in the field of signal classification. The tests have highlighted that the SVM, specifically the quadratic SVM, permits the best possible performance concerning classification accuracy, by considering different noise intensities superimposed on the signal. To assess the advantages of the proposal, a comparison with other classifiers available in the literature has been undertaken through numerical tests. Finally, the AMC-EM is experimentally evaluated, and the experimental results agree with those of the simulation.</p

    Advances in Data Mining Knowledge Discovery and Applications

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    Advances in Data Mining Knowledge Discovery and Applications aims to help data miners, researchers, scholars, and PhD students who wish to apply data mining techniques. The primary contribution of this book is highlighting frontier fields and implementations of the knowledge discovery and data mining. It seems to be same things are repeated again. But in general, same approach and techniques may help us in different fields and expertise areas. This book presents knowledge discovery and data mining applications in two different sections. As known that, data mining covers areas of statistics, machine learning, data management and databases, pattern recognition, artificial intelligence, and other areas. In this book, most of the areas are covered with different data mining applications. The eighteen chapters have been classified in two parts: Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining Applications

    Neural-network-aided automatic modulation classification

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    Automatic modulation classification (AMC) is a pattern matching problem which significantly impacts divers telecommunication systems, with significant applications in military and civilian contexts alike. Although its appearance in the literature is far from novel, recent developments in machine learning technologies have triggered an increased interest in this area of research. In the first part of this thesis, an AMC system is studied where, in addition to the typical point-to-point setup of one receiver and one transmitter, a second transmitter is also present, which is considered an interfering device. A convolutional neural network (CNN) is used for classification. In addition to studying the effect of interference strength, we propose a modification attempting to leverage some of the debilitating results of interference, and also study the effect of signal quantisation upon classification performance. Consequently, we assess a cooperative setting of AMC, namely one where the receiver features multiple antennas, and receives different versions of the same signal from the single-antenna transmitter. Through the combination of data from different antennas, it is evidenced that this cooperative approach leads to notable performance improvements over the established baseline. Finally, the cooperative scenario is expanded to a more complicated setting, where a realistic geographic distribution of four receiving nodes is modelled, and furthermore, the decision-making mechanism with regard to the identity of a signal resides in a fusion centre independent of the receivers, connected to them over finite-bandwidth backhaul links. In addition to the common concerns over classification accuracy and inference time, data reduction methods of various types (including “trained” lossy compression) are implemented with the objective of minimising the data load placed upon the backhaul links.Open Acces

    Primary User Emulation Detection in Cognitive Radio Networks

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    Cognitive radios (CRs) have been proposed as a promising solution for improving spectrum utilization via opportunistic spectrum sharing. In a CR network environment, primary (licensed) users have priority over secondary (unlicensed) users when accessing the wireless channel. Thus, if a malicious secondary user exploits this spectrum access etiquette by mimicking the spectral characteristics of a primary user, it can gain priority access to a wireless channel over other secondary users. This scenario is referred to in the literature as primary user emulation (PUE). This dissertation first covers three approaches for detecting primary user emulation attacks in cognitive radio networks, which can be classified in two categories. The first category is based on cyclostationary features, which employs a cyclostationary calculation to represent the modulation features of the user signals. The calculation results are then fed into an artificial neural network for classification. The second category is based on video processing method of action recognition in frequency domain, which includes two approaches. Both of them analyze the FFT sequences of wireless transmissions operating across a cognitive radio network environment, as well as classify their actions in the frequency domain. The first approach employs a covariance descriptor of motion-related features in the frequency domain, which is then fed into an artificial neural network for classification. The second approach is built upon the first approach, but employs a relational database system to record the motion-related feature vectors of primary users on this frequency band. When a certain transmission does not have a match record in the database, a covariance descriptor will be calculated and fed into an artificial neural network for classification. This dissertation is completed by a novel PUE detection approach which employs a distributed sensor network, where each sensor node works as an independent PUE detector. The emphasis of this work is how these nodes collaborate to obtain the final detection results for the whole network. All these proposed approaches have been validated via computer simulations as well as by experimental hardware implementations using the Universal Software Radio Peripheral (USRP) software-defined radio (SDR) platform
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