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This paper considers a Gaussian channel with one transmitter and two receivers. The goal is to maximize the communication rate at the intended/primary receiver subject to a disturbance constraint at the unintended/secondary receiver. The disturbance is measured in terms of minimum mean square error (MMSE) of the interference that the transmission to the primary receiver inflicts on the secondary receiver. The paper presents a new upper bound for the problem of maximizing the mutual information subject to an MMSE constraint. The new bound holds for vector inputs of any length and recovers a previously known limiting (when the length of vector input tends to infinity) expression from the work of Bustin $textit{et al.}$ The key technical novelty is a new upper bound on the MMSE. This bound allows one to bound the MMSE for all signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) values $textit{below}$ a certain SNR at which the MMSE is known (which corresponds to the disturbance constraint). This bound complements the `single-crossing point property of the MMSE that upper bounds the MMSE for all SNR values $textit{above}$ a certain value at which the MMSE value is known. The MMSE upper bound provides a refined characterization of the phase-transition phenomenon which manifests, in the limit as the length of the vector input goes to infinity, as a discontinuity of the MMSE for the problem at hand. For vector inputs of size $n=1$, a matching lower bound, to within an additive gap of order $O left( log log frac{1}{sf MMSE} right)$ (where ${sf MMSE}$ is the disturbance constraint), is shown by means of the mixed inputs technique recently introduced by Dytso $textit{et al.}$
This paper extends the single crossing point property of the scalar MMSE function, derived by Guo, Shamai and Verdu (first presented in ISIT 2008), to the parallel degraded MIMO scenario. It is shown that the matrix Q(t), which is the difference betw
The scalar additive Gaussian noise channel has the single crossing point property between the minimum-mean square error (MMSE) in the estimation of the input given the channel output, assuming a Gaussian input to the channel, and the MMSE assuming an
A hybrid communication network with a common analog signal and an independent digital data stream as input to each node in a multiple access network is considered. The receiver/base-station has to estimate the analog signal with a given fidelity, and
This work concerns the behavior of good (capacity achieving) codes in several multi-user settings in the Gaussian regime, in terms of their minimum mean-square error (MMSE) behavior. The settings investigated in this context include the Gaussian wire
We study the secrecy capacity of a helper-assisted Gaussian wiretap channel with a source, a legitimate receiver, an eavesdropper and an external helper, where each terminal is equipped with multiple antennas. Determining the secrecy capacity in this