7,098 research outputs found
The Capacity Region of Restricted Multi-Way Relay Channels with Deterministic Uplinks
This paper considers the multi-way relay channel (MWRC) where multiple users
exchange messages via a single relay. The capacity region is derived for a
special class of MWRCs where (i) the uplink and the downlink are separated in
the sense that there is no direct user-to-user links, (ii) the channel is
restricted in the sense that each user's transmitted channel symbols can depend
on only its own message, but not on its received channel symbols, and (iii) the
uplink is any deterministic function.Comment: Author's final version (to be presented at ISIT 2012
The Capacity Region of the Restricted Two-Way Relay Channel with Any Deterministic Uplink
This paper considers the two-way relay channel (TWRC) where two users
communicate via a relay. For the restricted TWRC where the uplink from the
users to the relay is any deterministic function and the downlink from the
relay to the users is any arbitrary channel, the capacity region is obtained.
The TWRC considered is restricted in the sense that each user can only transmit
a function of its message.Comment: author's final version (accepted and to appear in IEEE Communications
Letters
Raptor Codes in the Low SNR Regime
In this paper, we revisit the design of Raptor codes for binary input
additive white Gaussian noise (BIAWGN) channels, where we are interested in
very low signal to noise ratios (SNRs). A linear programming degree
distribution optimization problem is defined for Raptor codes in the low SNR
regime through several approximations. We also provide an exact expression for
the polynomial representation of the degree distribution with infinite maximum
degree in the low SNR regime, which enables us to calculate the exact value of
the fractions of output nodes of small degrees. A more practical degree
distribution design is also proposed for Raptor codes in the low SNR regime,
where we include the rate efficiency and the decoding complexity in the
optimization problem, and an upper bound on the maximum rate efficiency is
derived for given design parameters. Simulation results show that the Raptor
code with the designed degree distributions can approach rate efficiencies
larger than 0.95 in the low SNR regime.Comment: Submitted to the IEEE Transactions on Communications. arXiv admin
note: text overlap with arXiv:1510.0772
On Capacity and Optimal Scheduling for the Half-Duplex Multiple-Relay Channel
We study the half-duplex multiple-relay channel (HD-MRC) where every node can
either transmit or listen but cannot do both at the same time. We obtain a
capacity upper bound based on a max-flow min-cut argument and achievable
transmission rates based on the decode-forward (DF) coding strategy, for both
the discrete memoryless HD-MRC and the phase-fading HD-MRC. We discover that
both the upper bound and the achievable rates are functions of the
transmit/listen state (a description of which nodes transmit and which
receive). More precisely, they are functions of the time fraction of the
different states, which we term a schedule. We formulate the optimal scheduling
problem to find an optimal schedule that maximizes the DF rate. The optimal
scheduling problem turns out to be a maximin optimization, for which we propose
an algorithmic solution. We demonstrate our approach on a four-node
multiple-relay channel, obtaining closed-form solutions in certain scenarios.
Furthermore, we show that for the received signal-to-noise ratio degraded
phase-fading HD-MRC, the optimal scheduling problem can be simplified to a max
optimization.Comment: Author's final version (to appear in IEEE Transactions on Information
Theory
The Capacity of Three-Receiver AWGN Broadcast Channels with Receiver Message Side Information
This paper investigates the capacity region of three-receiver AWGN broadcast
channels where the receivers (i) have private-message requests and (ii) know
the messages requested by some other receivers as side information. We classify
these channels based on their side information into eight groups, and construct
different transmission schemes for the groups. For six groups, we characterize
the capacity region, and show that it improves both the best known inner and
outer bounds. For the remaining two groups, we improve the best known inner
bound by using side information during channel decoding at the receivers.Comment: This is an extended version of the same-titled paper submitted to
IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory (ISIT) 201
Generalized Interlinked Cycle Cover for Index Coding
A source coding problem over a noiseless broadcast channel where the source
is pre-informed about the contents of the cache of all receivers, is an index
coding problem. Furthermore, if each message is requested by one receiver, then
we call this an index coding problem with a unicast message setting. This
problem can be represented by a directed graph. In this paper, we first define
a structure (we call generalized interlinked cycles (GIC)) in directed graphs.
A GIC consists of cycles which are interlinked in some manner (i.e., not
disjoint), and it turns out that the GIC is a generalization of cliques and
cycles. We then propose a simple scalar linear encoding scheme with linear time
encoding complexity. This scheme exploits GICs in the digraph. We prove that
our scheme is optimal for a class of digraphs with message packets of any
length. Moreover, we show that our scheme can outperform existing techniques,
e.g., partial clique cover, local chromatic number, composite-coding, and
interlinked cycle cover.Comment: Extended version of the paper which is to be presented at the IEEE
Information Theory Workshop (ITW), 2015 Jej
Optimal Coding Schemes for the Three-Receiver AWGN Broadcast Channel with Receiver Message Side Information
This paper investigates the capacity region of the three-receiver AWGN
broadcast channel where the receivers (i) have private-message requests and
(ii) may know some of the messages requested by other receivers as side
information. We first classify all 64 possible side information configurations
into eight groups, each consisting of eight members. We next construct
transmission schemes, and derive new inner and outer bounds for the groups.
This establishes the capacity region for 52 out of 64 possible side information
configurations. For six groups (i.e., groups 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, and 8 in our
terminology), we establish the capacity region for all their members, and show
that it tightens both the best known inner and outer bounds. For group 4, our
inner and outer bounds tighten the best known inner bound and/or outer bound
for all the group members. Moreover, our bounds coincide at certain regions,
which can be characterized by two thresholds. For group 7, our inner and outer
bounds coincide for four members, thereby establishing the capacity region. For
the remaining four members, our bounds tighten both the best known inner and
outer bounds.Comment: Authors' final version (to appear in IEEE Transactions on Information
Theory
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