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It is known that the Karhunen-Lo`{e}ve transform (KLT) of Gaussian first-order auto-regressive (AR(1)) processes results in sinusoidal basis functions. The same sinusoidal bases come out of the independent-component analysis (ICA) and actually correspond to processes with completely independent samples. In this paper, we relax the Gaussian hypothesis and study how orthogonal transforms decouple symmetric-alpha-stable (S$alpha$S) AR(1) processes. The Gaussian case is not sparse and corresponds to $alpha=2$, while $0<alpha<2$ yields processes with sparse linear-prediction error. In the presence of sparsity, we show that operator-like wavelet bases do outperform the sinusoidal ones. Also, we observe that, for processes with very sparse increments ($0<alphaleq 1$), the operator-like wavelet basis is indistinguishable from the ICA solution obtained through numerical optimization. We consider two criteria for independence. The first is the Kullback-Leibler divergence between the joint probability density function (pdf) of the original signal and the product of the marginals in the transformed domain. The second is a divergence between the joint pdf of the original signal and the product of the marginals in the transformed domain, which is based on Steins formula for the mean-square estimation error in additive Gaussian noise. Our framework then offers a unified view that encompasses the discrete cosine transform (known to be asymptotically optimal for $alpha=2$) and Haar-like wavelets (for which we achieve optimality for $0<alphaleq1$).
In CDMA systems, the received user powers vary due to moving distance of users. Thus, the CDMA receivers consist of two stages. The first stage is the power estimator and the second one is a Multi-User Detector (MUD). Conventional methods for estimating the user powers are suitable for underor fully-loaded cases (when the number of users is less than or equal to the spreading gain). These methods fail to work for overloaded CDMA systems because of high interference among the users. Since the bandwidth is becoming more and more valuable, it is worth considering overloaded CDMA systems. In this paper, an optimum user power estimation for over-loaded CDMA systems with Gaussian inputs is proposed. We also introduce a suboptimum method with lower complexity whose performance is very close to the optimum one. We shall show that the proposed methods work for highly over-loaded systems (up to m(m + 1) =2 users for a system with only m chips). The performance of the proposed methods is demonstrated by simulations. In addition, a class of signature sets is proposed that seems to be optimum from a power estimation point of view. Additionally, an iterative estimation for binary input CDMA systems is proposed which works more accurately than the optimal Gaussian input method.
Recently, a new class of binary codes for overloaded CDMA systems are proposed that not only has the ability of errorless communication but also suitable for detecting active users. These codes are called COWDA [1]. In [1], a Maximum Likelihood (ML) decoder is proposed for this class of codes. Although the proposed scheme of coding/decoding show impressive performance, the decoder can be improved. In this paper by assuming more practical conditions for the traffic in the system, we suggest an algorithm that increases the performance of the decoder several orders of magnitude (the Bit-Error-Rate (BER) is divided by a factor of 400 in some Eb/N0s The algorithm supposes the Poison distribution for the time of activation/deactivation of the users.
In this paper we wish to introduce a method to reconstruct large size Welch Bound Equality (WBE) codes from small size WBE codes. The advantage of these codes is that the implementation of ML decoder for the large size codes is reduced to implementation of ML decoder for the core codes. This leads to a drastic reduction of the computational cost of ML decoder. Our method can also be used for constructing large Binary WBE (BWBE) codes from smaller ones. Additionally, we explain that although WBE codes are maximizing the sum channel capacity when the inputs are real valued, they are not necessarily appropriate when the input alphabet is binary. The discussion shows that when the input alphabet is binary, the Total Squared Correlation (TSC) of codes is not a proper figure of merit.
In this paper we introduce a new class of codes for over-loaded synchronous wireless CDMA systems which increases the number of users for a fixed number of chips without introducing any errors. In addition these codes support active user detection. We derive an upper bound on the number of users with a fixed spreading factor. Also we propose an ML decoder for a subclass of these codes that is computationally implementable. Although for our simulations we consider a scenario that is worse than what occurs in practice, simulation results indicate that this coding/decoding scheme is robust against additive noise. As an example, for 64 chips and 88 users we propose a coding/decoding scheme that can obtain an arbitrary small probability of error which is computationally feasible and can detect active users. Furthermore, we prove that for this to be possible the number of users cannot be beyond 230.
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