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In this paper, we consider the problem of power control for a wireless network with an arbitrarily time-varying topology, including the possible addition or removal of nodes. A data-driven design methodology that leverages graph neural networks (GNNs ) is adopted in order to efficiently parametrize the power control policy mapping the channel state information (CSI) to transmit powers. The specific GNN architecture, known as random edge GNN (REGNN), defines a non-linear graph convolutional filter whose spatial weights are tied to the channel coefficients. While prior work assumed a joint training approach whereby the REGNN-based policy is shared across all topologies, this paper targets adaptation of the power control policy based on limited CSI data regarding the current topology. To this end, we propose both black-box and modular meta-learning techniques. Black-box meta-learning optimizes a general-purpose adaptation procedure via (stochastic) gradient descent, while modular meta-learning finds a set of reusable modules that can form components of a solution for any new network topology. Numerical results validate the benefits of meta-learning for power control problems over joint training schemes, and demonstrate the advantages of modular meta-learning when data availability is extremely limited.
Power control in decentralized wireless networks poses a complex stochastic optimization problem when formulated as the maximization of the average sum rate for arbitrary interference graphs. Recent work has introduced data-driven design methods that leverage graph neural network (GNN) to efficiently parametrize the power control policy mapping channel state information (CSI) to the power vector. The specific GNN architecture, known as random edge GNN (REGNN), defines a non-linear graph convolutional architecture whose spatial weights are tied to the channel coefficients, enabling a direct adaption to channel conditions. This paper studies the higher-level problem of enabling fast adaption of the power control policy to time-varying topologies. To this end, we apply first-order meta-learning on data from multiple topologies with the aim of optimizing for a few-shot adaptation to new network configurations.
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