721,256 research outputs found
Semi-Supervised Radio Signal Identification
Radio emitter recognition in dense multi-user environments is an important
tool for optimizing spectrum utilization, identifying and minimizing
interference, and enforcing spectrum policy. Radio data is readily available
and easy to obtain from an antenna, but labeled and curated data is often
scarce making supervised learning strategies difficult and time consuming in
practice. We demonstrate that semi-supervised learning techniques can be used
to scale learning beyond supervised datasets, allowing for discerning and
recalling new radio signals by using sparse signal representations based on
both unsupervised and supervised methods for nonlinear feature learning and
clustering methods
Weakly-supervised Dictionary Learning
We present a probabilistic modeling and inference framework for
discriminative analysis dictionary learning under a weak supervision setting.
Dictionary learning approaches have been widely used for tasks such as
low-level signal denoising and restoration as well as high-level classification
tasks, which can be applied to audio and image analysis. Synthesis dictionary
learning aims at jointly learning a dictionary and corresponding sparse
coefficients to provide accurate data representation. This approach is useful
for denoising and signal restoration, but may lead to sub-optimal
classification performance. By contrast, analysis dictionary learning provides
a transform that maps data to a sparse discriminative representation suitable
for classification. We consider the problem of analysis dictionary learning for
time-series data under a weak supervision setting in which signals are assigned
with a global label instead of an instantaneous label signal. We propose a
discriminative probabilistic model that incorporates both label information and
sparsity constraints on the underlying latent instantaneous label signal using
cardinality control. We present the expectation maximization (EM) procedure for
maximum likelihood estimation (MLE) of the proposed model. To facilitate a
computationally efficient E-step, we propose both a chain and a novel tree
graph reformulation of the graphical model. The performance of the proposed
model is demonstrated on both synthetic and real-world data
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