254 research outputs found

    Achievable DoF-delay trade-offs for the K-user MIMO interference channel with delayed CSIT

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    ©2016 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.The degrees of freedom (DoFs) of the K-user multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) interference channel are studied when perfect, but delayed channel state information is available at the transmitter side (delayed CSIT). Recent works have proposed schemes improving the DoF knowledge of the interference channel, but at the cost of developing transmission involving many channel uses (long delay), thus increasing the complexity at both transmitter and receiver side. This paper proposes three linear precoding strategies, limited to at most three phases, based on the concept of interference alignment, and built upon three main ingredients: delayed CSIT precoding, user scheduling, and redundancy transmission. In this respect, the interference alignment is realized by exploiting delayed CSIT to align the interference at the non-intended receivers along the space-time domain. Moreover, a new framework is proposed where the number of transmitted symbols and duration of the phases is obtained as the solution of a maximization problem, and enabling the introduction of complexity constraints, which allows deriving the achievable DoF as a function of the transmission delay, i.e., the achievable DoF-delay trade-off. Finally, the latter part of this paper settles that the assumption of time-varying channels common along all the literature on delayed CSIT is indeed unnecessary.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    On SDoF of Multi-Receiver Wiretap Channel With Alternating CSIT

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    We study the problem of secure transmission over a Gaussian multi-input single-output (MISO) two receiver channel with an external eavesdropper, under the assumption that the state of the channel which is available to each receiver is conveyed either perfectly (PP) or with delay (DD) to the transmitter. Denoting by S1S_1, S2S_2, and S3S_3 the channel state information at the transmitter (CSIT) of user 1, user 2, and eavesdropper, respectively, the overall CSIT can then alternate between eight possible states, i.e., (S1,S2,S3)∈{P,D}3(S_1,S_2,S_3) \in \{P,D\}^3. We denote by λS1S2S3\lambda_{S_1 S_2 S_3} the fraction of time during which the state S1S2S3S_1S_2S_3 occurs. Under these assumptions, we first consider the Gaussian MISO wiretap channel and characterize the secure degrees of freedom (SDoF). Next, we consider the general multi-receiver setup and characterize the SDoF region of fixed hybrid states PPDPPD, PDPPDP, and DDPDDP. We then focus our attention on the symmetric case in which λPDD=λDPD\lambda_{PDD}=\lambda_{DPD}. For this case, we establish bounds on SDoF region. The analysis reveals that alternating CSIT allows synergistic gains in terms of SDoF; and shows that, by opposition to encoding separately over different states, joint encoding across the states enables strictly better secure rates. Furthermore, we specialize our results for the two receivers channel with an external eavesdropper to the two-user broadcast channel. We show that, the synergistic gains in terms of SDoF by alternating CSIT is not restricted to multi-receiver wiretap channels; and, can also be harnessed under broadcast setting.Comment: To Appear in IEEE Transactions on Information Forensics and Securit
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