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Polar Coded Faster-than-Nyquist (FTN) Signaling with Symbol-by-Symbol Detection

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 Added by Adem Cicek
 Publication date 2020
and research's language is English




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Reduced complexity faster-than-Nyquist (FTN) signaling systems are gaining increased attention as they provide improved bandwidth utilization for an acceptable level of detection complexity. In order to have a better understanding of the tradeoff between performance and complexity of the reduced complexity FTN detection techniques, it is necessary to study these techniques in the presence of channel coding. In this paper, we investigate the performance a polar coded FTN system which uses a reduced complexity FTN detection, namely, the recently proposed successive symbol-by-symbol with go-backK sequence estimation (SSSgbKSE) technique. Simulations are performed for various intersymbol-interference (ISI) levels and for various go-back-K values. Bit error rate (BER) performance of Bahl-Cocke-Jelinek-Raviv (BCJR) detection and SSSgbKSE detection techniques are studied for both uncoded and polar coded systems. Simulation results reveal that polar codes can compensate some of the performance loss incurred in the reduced complexity SSSgbKSE technique and assist in closing the performance gap between BCJR and SSSgbKSE detection algorithms.



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This letter proposes a blind symbol packing rartio estimation for faster-than-Nyquist (FTN) signaling based on state-of-the-art deep learning (DL) technology. The symbol packing rartio is a vital parameter to obtain the real symbol rate and recover the origin symbols from the received symbols by calculating the intersymbol interference (ISI). To the best of our knowledge, this is the first effective estimation approach for symbol packing rartio in FTN signaling and has shown its fast convergence and robustness to signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) by numerical simulations. Benefiting from the proposed blind estimation, the packing-ratio-based adaptive FTN transmission without dedicate channel or control frame becomes available. Also, the secure FTN communications based on secret symbol packing rartio can be easily cracked.
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Faster-than-Nyquist (FTN) is a promising paradigm to improve bandwidth utilization at the expense of additional intersymbol interference (ISI). In this paper, we apply state-of-the-art deep learning (DL) technology into receiver design for FTN signaling and propose two DL-based new architectures. Firstly, we propose an FTN signal detection based on DL and connect it with the successive interference cancellation (SIC) to replace traditional detection algorithms. Simulation results show that this architecture can achieve near-optimal performance in both uncoded and coded scenarios. Additionally, we propose a DL-based joint signal detection and decoding for FTN signaling to replace the complete baseband part in traditional FTN receivers. The performance of this new architecture has also been illustrated by simulation results. Finally, both the proposed DL-based receiver architecture has the robustness to signal to noise ratio (SNR). In a nutshell, DL has been proved to be a powerful tool for the FTN receiver design.
359 - Ahmed Ibrahim , Ebrahim Bedeer , 2021
Faster-than-Nyquist (FTN) signaling is a promising non-orthogonal pulse modulation technique that can improve the spectral efficiency (SE) of next generation communication systems at the expense of higher detection complexity to remove the introduced inter-symbol interference (ISI). In this paper, we investigate the detection problem of ultra high-order quadrature-amplitude modulation (QAM) FTN signaling where we exploit a mathematical programming technique based on the alternating directions multiplier method (ADMM). The proposed ADMM sequence estimation (ADMMSE) FTN signaling detector demonstrates an excellent trade-off between performance and computational effort enabling, for the first time in the FTN signaling literature, successful detection and SE gains for QAM modulation orders as high as 64K (65,536). The complexity of the proposed ADMMSE detector is polynomial in the length of the transmit symbols sequence and its sensitivity to the modulation order increases only logarithmically. Simulation results show that for 16-QAM, the proposed ADMMSE FTN signaling detector achieves comparable SE gains to the generalized approach semidefinite relaxation-based sequence estimation (GASDRSE) FTN signaling detector, but at an experimentally evaluated much lower computational time. Simulation results additionally show SE gains for modulation orders starting from 4-QAM, or quadrature phase shift keying (QPSK), up to and including 64K-QAM when compared to conventional Nyquist signaling. The very low computational effort required makes the proposed ADMMSE detector a practically promising FTN signaling detector for both low order and ultra high-order QAM FTN signaling systems.
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