254 research outputs found
Spatially Coupled Turbo Codes
In this paper, we introduce the concept of spatially coupled turbo codes
(SC-TCs), as the turbo codes counterpart of spatially coupled low-density
parity-check codes. We describe spatial coupling for both Berrou et al. and
Benedetto et al. parallel and serially concatenated codes. For the binary
erasure channel, we derive the exact density evolution (DE) equations of SC-TCs
by using the method proposed by Kurkoski et al. to compute the decoding erasure
probability of convolutional encoders. Using DE, we then analyze the asymptotic
behavior of SC-TCs. We observe that the belief propagation (BP) threshold of
SC-TCs improves with respect to that of the uncoupled ensemble and approaches
its maximum a posteriori threshold. This phenomenon is especially significant
for serially concatenated codes, whose uncoupled ensemble suffers from a poor
BP threshold.Comment: in Proc. 8th International Symposium on Turbo Codes & Iterative
Information Processing 2014, Bremen, Germany, August 2014. To appear. (The
PCC ensemble is changed with respect to the one in the previous version of
the paper. However, it gives identical thresholds
Spatially Coupled Turbo Codes: Principles and Finite Length Performance
In this paper, we give an overview of spatially coupled turbo codes (SC-TCs),
the spatial coupling of parallel and serially concatenated convolutional codes,
recently introduced by the authors. For presentation purposes, we focus on
spatially coupled serially concatenated codes (SC-SCCs). We review the main
principles of SC-TCs and discuss their exact density evolution (DE) analysis on
the binary erasure channel. We also consider the construction of a family of
rate-compatible SC-SCCs with simple 4-state component encoders. For all
considered code rates, threshold saturation of the belief propagation (BP) to
the maximum a posteriori threshold of the uncoupled ensemble is demonstrated,
and it is shown that the BP threshold approaches the Shannon limit as the
coupling memory increases. Finally we give some simulation results for finite
lengths.Comment: Invited paper, IEEE Int. Symp. Wireless Communications Systems
(ISWCS), Aug. 201
A Turbo-Detection Aided Serially Concatenated MPEG-4/TCM Videophone Transceiver
A Turbo-detection aided serially concatenated inner Trellis Coded Modulation (TCM) scheme is combined with four different outer codes, namely with a Reversible Variable Length Code (RVLC), a Non-Systematic Convolutional (NSC) code a Recursive Systematic Convolutional (RSC) code or a Low Density Parity Check (LDPC) code. These four outer constituent codes are comparatively studied in the context of an MPEG4 videophone transceiver. These serially concatenated schemes are also compared to a stand-alone LDPC coded MPEG4 videophone system at the same effective overall coding rate. The performance of the proposed schemes is evaluated when communicating over uncorrelated Rayleigh fading channels. It was found that the serially concatenated TCM-NSC scheme was the most attractive one in terms of coding gain and decoding complexity among all the schemes considered in the context of the MPEG4 videophone transceiver. By contrast, the serially concatenated TCM-RSC scheme was found to attain the highest iteration gain among the schemes considered
Concatenated Turbo/LDPC codes for deep space communications: performance and implementation
Deep space communications require error correction codes able to reach extremely low bit-error-rates, possibly with a steep waterfall region and without error floor. Several schemes have been proposed in the literature to achieve these goals. Most of them rely on the concatenation of different codes that leads to high hardware implementation complexity and poor resource sharing. This work proposes a scheme based on the concatenation of non-custom LDPC and turbo codes that achieves excellent error correction performance. Moreover, since both LDPC and turbo codes can be decoded with the BCJR algorithm, our preliminary results show that an efficient hardware architecture with high resource reuse can be designe
Trapping Set Enumerators for Repeat Multiple Accumulate Code Ensembles
The serial concatenation of a repetition code with two or more accumulators
has the advantage of a simple encoder structure. Furthermore, the resulting
ensemble is asymptotically good and exhibits minimum distance growing linearly
with block length. However, in practice these codes cannot be decoded by a
maximum likelihood decoder, and iterative decoding schemes must be employed.
For low-density parity-check codes, the notion of trapping sets has been
introduced to estimate the performance of these codes under iterative message
passing decoding. In this paper, we present a closed form finite length
ensemble trapping set enumerator for repeat multiple accumulate codes by
creating a trellis representation of trapping sets. We also obtain the
asymptotic expressions when the block length tends to infinity and evaluate
them numerically.Comment: 5 pages, to appear in proc. IEEE ISIT, June 200
Spatially Coupled Turbo-Like Codes
The focus of this thesis is on proposing and analyzing a powerful class of codes on graphs---with trellis constraints---that can simultaneously approach capacity and achieve very low error floor. In particular, we propose the concept of spatial coupling for turbo-like code (SC-TC) ensembles and investigate the impact of coupling on the performance of these codes. The main elements of this study can be summarized by the following four major topics. First, we considered the spatial coupling of parallel concatenated codes (PCCs), serially concatenated codes (SCCs), and hybrid concatenated codes (HCCs).We also proposed two extensions of braided convolutional codes (BCCs) to higher coupling memories. Second, we investigated the impact of coupling on the asymptotic behavior of the proposed ensembles in term of the decoding thresholds. For that, we derived the exact density evolution (DE) equations of the proposed SC-TC ensembles over the binary erasure channel. Using the DE equations, we found the thresholds of the coupled and uncoupled ensembles under belief propagation (BP) decoding for a wide range of rates. We also computed the maximum a-posteriori (MAP) thresholds of the underlying uncoupled ensembles. Our numerical results confirm that TCs have excellent MAP thresholds, and for a large enough coupling memory, the BP threshold of an SC-TC ensemble improves to the MAP threshold of the underlying TC ensemble. This phenomenon is called threshold saturation and we proved its occurrence for SC-TCs by use of a proof technique based on the potential function of the ensembles.Third, we investigated and discussed the performance of SC-TCs in the finite length regime. We proved that under certain conditions the minimum distance of an SC-TCs is either larger or equal to that of its underlying uncoupled ensemble. Based on this fact, we performed a weight enumerator (WE) analysis for the underlying uncoupled ensembles to investigate the error floor performance of the SC-TC ensembles. We computed bounds on the error rate performance and minimum distance of the TC ensembles. These bounds indicate very low error floor for SCC, HCC, and BCC ensembles, and show that for HCC, and BCC ensembles, the minimum distance grows linearly with the input block length.The results from the DE and WE analysis demonstrate that the performance of TCs benefits from spatial coupling in both waterfall and error floor regions. While uncoupled TC ensembles with close-to-capacity performance exhibit a high error floor, our results show that SC-TCs can simultaneously approach capacity and achieve very low error floor.Fourth, we proposed a unified ensemble of TCs that includes all the considered TC classes. We showed that for each of the original classes of TCs, it is possible to find an equivalent ensemble by proper selection of the design parameters in the unified ensemble. This unified ensemble not only helps us to understand the connections and trade-offs between the TC ensembles but also can be considered as a bridge between TCs and generalized low-density parity check codes
- …