Browsing by Subject "Channel Coding"
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Item Coding Schemes for Physical Layer Network Coding Over a Two-Way Relay Channel(2013-08-09) Hern, Brett MichaelWe consider a two-way relay channel in which two transmitters want to exchange information through a central relay. The relay observes a superposition of the trans- mitted signals from which a function of the transmitted messages is computed for broadcast. We consider the design of codebooks which permit the recovery of a function at the relay and derive information-theoretic bounds on the rates for reliable decoding at the relay. In the spirit of compute-and-forward, we present a multilevel coding scheme that permits reliable computation (or, decoding) of a class of functions at the relay. The function to be decoded is chosen at the relay depending on the channel realization. We define such a class of reliably computable functions for the proposed coding scheme and derive rates that are universally achievable over a set of channel gains when this class of functions is used at the relay. We develop our framework with general modulation formats in mind, but numerical results are presented for the case where each node transmits using 4-ary and 8-ary modulation schemes. Numerical results demonstrate that the flexibility afforded by our proposed scheme permits substantially higher rates than those achievable by always using a fixed function or considering only linear functions over higher order fields. Our numerical results indicate that it is favorable to allow the relay to attempt both compute-and-forward and decode-and-forward decoding. Indeed, either method considered separately is suboptimal for computation over general channels. However, we obtain a converse result when the transmitters are restricted to using identical binary linear codebooks generated uniformly at random. We show that it is impossible for this code ensemble to achieve any rate higher than the maximum of the rates achieved using compute-and-forward and decode-and-forward decoding. Finally, we turn our attention to the design of low density parity check (LDPC) ensembles which can practically achieve these information rates with joint-compute- and-forward message passing decoding. To this end, we construct a class of two-way erasure multiple access channels for which we can exactly characterize the performance of joint-compute-and-forward message passing decoding. We derive the processing rules and a density evolution like analysis for several classes of LDPC ensembles. Utilizing the universally optimal performance of spatially coupled LDPC ensembles with message passing decoding, we show that a single encoder and de- coder with puncturing can achieve the optimal rate region for a range of channel parameters.Item Performance Analysis of Block Codes over Finite-state Channels in Delay-sensitive Communications(2014-01-22) Hamidi Sepehr, FatemehAs the mobile application landscape expands, wireless networks are tasked with supporting different connection profiles, including real-time traffic and delay-sensitive communications. Among many ensuing engineering challenges is the need to better understand the fundamental limits of forward error correction in non-asymptotic regimes. This dissertation seeks to characterize the performance of block codes over finite-state channels with memory and also evaluate their queueing performance under different encoding/decoding schemes. In particular, a fading formulation is considered where a discrete channel with correlation over time introduces errors. For carefully selected channel models and arrival processes, a tractable Markov structure composed of queue length and channel state is identified. This facilitates the analysis of the stationary behavior of the system, leading to evaluation criteria such as bounds on the probability of the queue exceeding a threshold. Specifically, this dissertation focuses on system models with scalable arrival profiles based on Poisson processes, and finite-state memory channels. These assumptions permit the rigorous comparison of system performance for codes with arbitrary block lengths and code rates. Based on this characterization, it is possible to optimize code parameters for delay-sensitive applications over various channels. Random codes and BCH codes are then employed as means to study the relationship between code-rate selection and the queueing performance of point-to-point data links. The introduced methodology offers a new perspective on the joint queueing-coding analysis for finite-state channels, and is supported by numerical simulations. Furthermore, classical results from information theory are revisited in the context of channels with rare transitions, and bounds on the probabilities of decoding failure are derived for random codes. An analysis framework is presented where channel dependencies within and across code words are preserved. The results are subsequently integrated into a queueing formulation. It is shown that for current formulation, the performance analysis based on upper bounds provides a good estimate of both the system performance and the optimum code parameters. Overall, this study offers new insights about the impact of channel correlation on the performance of delay-aware communications and provides novel guidelines to select optimum code rates and block lengths.