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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS OF DECORRELATING DETECTORS FOR DUAL-RATE SYNCHRONOUS DS/CDMA SYSTEMS OVER FREQUENCY-SELECTIVE RAYLEIGH FADING CHANNELS

LI, XIANGTAO 16 September 2002 (has links)
No description available.
2

Low Density Parity Check Code Designs For Distributed Joint Source-Channel Coding Over Multiple Access Channels

Shahid, Iqbal 23 August 2013 (has links)
The efficient and reliable communication of data from multiple sources to a single receiver plays an important role in emerging applications such as wireless sensor networks. The correlation among observations picked-up by spatially distributed sensors in such a network can be exploited to enhance the efficiency and reliability of communication. In particular, information theory shows that optimal communication of information from correlated sources requires distributed joint source-channel (DJSC) coding. This dissertation develops new approaches to designing DJSC codes based on low density parity check (LDPC) codes. The existence of low complexity code optimization algorithms and decoding algorithms make these codes ideal for joint optimization and decoding of multiple codes operating on correlated sources. The well known EXIT analysis-based LDPC code optimization method for channel coding in single-user point-to-point systems is extended to the optimization of two-user LDPC codes for DJSC coding in multi-access channels (MACs) with correlated users. Considering an orthogonal MAC with two correlated binary sources, an asymptotically optimal DJSC code construction capable of achieving any rate-pair in the theoretically-achievable two-user rate-region is presented. A practical approach to realizing this scheme using irregular LDPC codes is then developed. Experimental results are presented which demonstrate that the proposed codes can approach theoretical bounds when the codeword length is increased. For short codeword length and high inter-source correlation, these DJSC codes are shown to significantly outperform separate source and channel codes. Next, the DJSC code design for the transmission of a pair of correlated binary sources over a Gaussian MAC (GMAC) is investigated. The separate source and channel coding is known to be sub-optimal in this case. For the optimization of a pair of irregular LDPC codes, the EXIT analysis for message passing in a joint factor-graph decoder is analyzed, and an approach to modeling the probability density functions of messages associated with graph nodes which represent the inter-source dependence is proposed. Simulation results show that, for sufficiently large codeword lengths and high inter-source correlation, the proposed DJSC codes for GMAC can achieve rates higher than the theoretical upper bound for separate source and channel coding.
3

Low Density Parity Check Code Designs For Distributed Joint Source-Channel Coding Over Multiple Access Channels

Shahid, Iqbal 23 August 2013 (has links)
The efficient and reliable communication of data from multiple sources to a single receiver plays an important role in emerging applications such as wireless sensor networks. The correlation among observations picked-up by spatially distributed sensors in such a network can be exploited to enhance the efficiency and reliability of communication. In particular, information theory shows that optimal communication of information from correlated sources requires distributed joint source-channel (DJSC) coding. This dissertation develops new approaches to designing DJSC codes based on low density parity check (LDPC) codes. The existence of low complexity code optimization algorithms and decoding algorithms make these codes ideal for joint optimization and decoding of multiple codes operating on correlated sources. The well known EXIT analysis-based LDPC code optimization method for channel coding in single-user point-to-point systems is extended to the optimization of two-user LDPC codes for DJSC coding in multi-access channels (MACs) with correlated users. Considering an orthogonal MAC with two correlated binary sources, an asymptotically optimal DJSC code construction capable of achieving any rate-pair in the theoretically-achievable two-user rate-region is presented. A practical approach to realizing this scheme using irregular LDPC codes is then developed. Experimental results are presented which demonstrate that the proposed codes can approach theoretical bounds when the codeword length is increased. For short codeword length and high inter-source correlation, these DJSC codes are shown to significantly outperform separate source and channel codes. Next, the DJSC code design for the transmission of a pair of correlated binary sources over a Gaussian MAC (GMAC) is investigated. The separate source and channel coding is known to be sub-optimal in this case. For the optimization of a pair of irregular LDPC codes, the EXIT analysis for message passing in a joint factor-graph decoder is analyzed, and an approach to modeling the probability density functions of messages associated with graph nodes which represent the inter-source dependence is proposed. Simulation results show that, for sufficiently large codeword lengths and high inter-source correlation, the proposed DJSC codes for GMAC can achieve rates higher than the theoretical upper bound for separate source and channel coding.

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