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43
Diversity and Multiplexing: A Fundamental Tradeoff in Multiple Antenna Channels
- IEEE Trans. Inform. Theory
, 2002
"... Multiple antennas can be used for increasing the amount of diversity or the number of degrees of freedom in wireless communication systems. In this paper, we propose the point of view that both types of gains can be simultaneously obtained for a given multiple antenna channel, but there is a fund ..."
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Cited by 415 (15 self)
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Multiple antennas can be used for increasing the amount of diversity or the number of degrees of freedom in wireless communication systems. In this paper, we propose the point of view that both types of gains can be simultaneously obtained for a given multiple antenna channel, but there is a fundamental tradeo# between how much of each any coding scheme can get. For the richly scattered Rayleigh fading channel, we give a simple characterization of the optimal tradeo# curve and use it to evaluate the performance of existing multiple antenna schemes.
Fading Channels: Information-Theoretic And Communications Aspects
- IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INFORMATION THEORY
, 1998
"... In this paper we review the most peculiar and interesting information-theoretic and communications features of fading channels. We first describe the statistical models of fading channels which are frequently used in the analysis and design of communication systems. Next, we focus on the information ..."
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Cited by 206 (1 self)
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In this paper we review the most peculiar and interesting information-theoretic and communications features of fading channels. We first describe the statistical models of fading channels which are frequently used in the analysis and design of communication systems. Next, we focus on the information theory of fading channels, by emphasizing capacity as the most important performance measure. Both single-user and multiuser transmission are examined. Further, we describe how the structure of fading channels impacts code design, and finally overview equalization of fading multipath channels.
Linear Multiuser Receivers: Effective Interference, Effective Bandwidth and User Capacity
- IEEE Trans. Inform. Theory
, 1999
"... Multiuser receivers improve the performance of spread-spectrum and antenna-array systems by exploiting the structure of the multiaccess interference when demodulating the signal of a user. Much of the previous work on the performance analysis of multiuser receivers has focused on their ability to re ..."
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Cited by 193 (10 self)
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Multiuser receivers improve the performance of spread-spectrum and antenna-array systems by exploiting the structure of the multiaccess interference when demodulating the signal of a user. Much of the previous work on the performance analysis of multiuser receivers has focused on their ability to reject worst case interference. Their performance in a power-controlled network and the resulting user capacity are less well-understood. In this paper, we show that in a large system with each user using random spreading sequences, the limiting interference effects under several linear multiuser receivers can be decoupled, such that each interferer can be ascribed a level of effective interference that it provides to the user to be demodulated. Applying these results to the uplink of a single power-controlled cell, we derive an effective bandwidth characterization of the user capacity: the signal-to-interference requirements of all the users can be met if and only if the sum of the effective bandwidths of the users is less than the total number of degrees of freedom in the system. The effective bandwidth of a user depends only on its own SIR requirement, and simple expressions are derived for three linear receivers: the conventional matched filter, the decorrelator, and the MMSE receiver. The effective bandwidths under the three receivers serve as a basis for performance comparison.
Spectral Efficiency of CDMA with Random Spreading
- IEEE TRANS. INFORM. THEORY
, 1999
"... The CDMA channel with randomly and independently chosen spreading sequences accurately models the situation where pseudonoise sequences span many symbol periods. Furthermore, its analysis provides a comparison baseline for CDMA channels with deterministic signature waveforms spanning one symbol per ..."
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Cited by 153 (20 self)
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The CDMA channel with randomly and independently chosen spreading sequences accurately models the situation where pseudonoise sequences span many symbol periods. Furthermore, its analysis provides a comparison baseline for CDMA channels with deterministic signature waveforms spanning one symbol period. We analyze the spectral efficiency (total capacity per chip) as a function of the number of users, spreading gain, and signal-to-noise ratio, and we quantify the loss in efficiency relative to an optimally chosen set of signature sequences and relative to multiaccess with no spreading. White Gaussian background noise and equal-power synchronous users are assumed. The following receivers are analyzed: a) optimal joint processing, b) single-user matched filtering, c) decorrelation, and d) MMSE linear processing.
Sum Capacity of a Gaussian Vector Broadcast Channel
- IEEE Trans. Inform. Theory
, 2002
"... This paper characterizes the sum capacity of a class of non-degraded Gaussian vectB broadcast channels where a singletransmitter with multiple transmit terminals sends independent information to multiple receivers. Coordinat+[ is allowed among the transmit teminals, but not among the different recei ..."
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Cited by 134 (11 self)
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This paper characterizes the sum capacity of a class of non-degraded Gaussian vectB broadcast channels where a singletransmitter with multiple transmit terminals sends independent information to multiple receivers. Coordinat+[ is allowed among the transmit teminals, but not among the different receivers. The sum capacity is shown t be a saddlepoint of a Gaussian mu al informat]R game, where a signal player chooses a tansmit covariance matrix to maximize the mutual information, and a noise player chooses a fictitious noise correlation to minimize the mutual information. This result holds fort he class of Gaussian channels whose saddle-point satisfies a full rank condition. Furt her,t he sum capacity is achieved using a precoding method for Gaussian channels with additive side information non-causally known at the transmitter. The optimal precoding structure is shown t correspond to a decision-feedback equalizer that decomposes t e broadcast channel into a series of single-user channels with intk ference pre-subtract] at the transmiter.
Sum capacity of the vector Gaussian broadcast channel and uplink-downlink duality
- IEEE Trans. on Inform. Theory
, 1912
"... We characterize the sum capacity of the vector Gaussian broadcast channel by showing that the existing inner bound of Marton and the existing upper bound of Sato are tight for this channel. We exploit an intimate four-way connection between the vector broadcast channel, the corresponding point-to-po ..."
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Cited by 117 (1 self)
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We characterize the sum capacity of the vector Gaussian broadcast channel by showing that the existing inner bound of Marton and the existing upper bound of Sato are tight for this channel. We exploit an intimate four-way connection between the vector broadcast channel, the corresponding point-to-point channel (where the receivers can cooperate), the multiple access channel (where the role of transmitters and receivers are reversed), and the corresponding point-to-point channel (where the transmitters can cooperate). 1
Capacity Scaling in MIMO Wireless Systems Under Correlated Fading
- IEEE TRANS. INFORM. THEORY
, 2002
"... Previous studies have shown that single-user systems employing-element antenna arrays at both the transmitter and the receiver can achieve a capacity proportional to , assuming independent Rayleigh fading between antenna pairs. In this paper, we explore the capacity of dual-antenna-array systems und ..."
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Cited by 116 (2 self)
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Previous studies have shown that single-user systems employing-element antenna arrays at both the transmitter and the receiver can achieve a capacity proportional to , assuming independent Rayleigh fading between antenna pairs. In this paper, we explore the capacity of dual-antenna-array systems under correlated fading via theoretical analysis and ray-tracing simulations. We derive and compare expressions for the asymptotic growth rate of capacity with antennas for both independent and correlated fading cases; the latter is derived under some assumptions about the scaling of the fading correlation structure. In both cases, the theoretic capacity growth is linear in but the growth rate is 10--20% smaller in the presence of correlated fading. We analyze our assumption of separable transmit/receive correlations via simulations based on a ray-tracing propagation model. Results show that empirical capacities converge to the limit capacity predicted from our asymptotic theory even at moderate n=16. We present results for both the cases when the transmitter does and does not know the channel realization.
Mutual information and minimum mean-square error in Gaussian channels
- IEEE Trans. Inform. Theory
, 2005
"... Abstract — This paper deals with arbitrarily distributed finitepower input signals observed through an additive Gaussian noise channel. It shows a new formula that connects the inputoutput mutual information and the minimum mean-square error (MMSE) achievable by optimal estimation of the input given ..."
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Cited by 69 (11 self)
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Abstract — This paper deals with arbitrarily distributed finitepower input signals observed through an additive Gaussian noise channel. It shows a new formula that connects the inputoutput mutual information and the minimum mean-square error (MMSE) achievable by optimal estimation of the input given the output. That is, the derivative of the mutual information (nats) with respect to the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) is equal to half the MMSE, regardless of the input statistics. This relationship holds for both scalar and vector signals, as well as for discrete-time and continuous-time noncausal MMSE estimation. This fundamental information-theoretic result has an unexpected consequence in continuous-time nonlinear estimation: For any input signal with finite power, the causal filtering MMSE achieved at SNR is equal to the average value of the noncausal smoothing MMSE achieved with a channel whose signal-to-noise ratio is chosen uniformly distributed between 0 and SNR. Index Terms — Mutual information, Gaussian channel, minimum mean-square error (MMSE), Wiener process, optimal
Optimal Sequences, Power Control, and User Capacity of Synchronous CDMA Systems with Linear MMSE Multiuser Receivers
- IEEE TRANS. INFORM. THEORY
, 1999
"... There has been intense effort in the past decade to develop multiuser receiver structures which mitigate interference between users in spread-spectrum systems. While much of this research is performed at the physical layer, the appropriate power control and choice of signature sequences in conjuncti ..."
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Cited by 60 (5 self)
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There has been intense effort in the past decade to develop multiuser receiver structures which mitigate interference between users in spread-spectrum systems. While much of this research is performed at the physical layer, the appropriate power control and choice of signature sequences in conjunction with multiuser receivers and the resulting network user capacity is not well understood. In this paper we will focus on a single cell and consider both the uplink and downlink scenarios and assume a synchronous CDMA (S-CDMA) system. We characterize the user capacity of a single cell with the optimal linear receiver (MMSE receiver). The user capacity of the system is the maximum number of users per unit processing gain admissible in the system such that each user has its quality-of-service (QoS) requirement (expressed in terms of its desired signal-to-interference ratio) met. Our characterization allows us to describe the user capacity through a simple effective bandwidth characterization: Users are allowed in the system if and only if the sum of their effective bandwidths is less than the processing gain of the system. The effective bandwidth of each user is a simple monotonic function of its QoS requirement. We identify the optimal signature sequences and power control strategies so that the users meet their QoS requirement. The optimality is in the sense of minimizing the sum of allocated powers. It turns out that with this optimal allocation of signature sequences and powers, the linear MMSE receiver is just the corresponding matched filter for each user. We also characterize the effect of transmit power constraints on the user capacity.
Design and Analysis of Low-Complexity Interference Mitigation on Vector Channels
, 2001
"... Linear multiuser detectors for vector channels with crosstalk are approximated by weighted matrix polynomials. The weight optimization problem is overcome using convergence results from random matrix theory. The results are also extended to receivers with subsequent successive decoding. ..."
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Cited by 25 (12 self)
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Linear multiuser detectors for vector channels with crosstalk are approximated by weighted matrix polynomials. The weight optimization problem is overcome using convergence results from random matrix theory. The results are also extended to receivers with subsequent successive decoding.

