Visible to the public Biblio

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2020-06-15
Bouras, Christos, Kanakis, Nikolaos.  2018.  Evolving AL-FEC Application Towards 5G NGMN. 2018 9th IFIP International Conference on New Technologies, Mobility and Security (NTMS). :1–5.
The fifth generation of mobile technology (5G) is positioned to address the demands and business contexts of 2020 and beyond. Therefore, in 5G, there is a need to push the envelope of performance to provide, where needed, for example, much greater throughput, much lower latency, ultra-high reliability, much higher connectivity density, and higher mobility range. A crucial point in the effective provisioning of 5G Next Generation Mobile Networks (NGMN) lies in the efficient error control and in more details in the utilization of Forward Error Correction (FEC) codes on the application layer. FEC is a method for error control of data transmission adopted in several mobile multicast standards. FEC is a feedback free error recovery method where the sender introduces redundant data in advance with the source data enabling the recipient to recover from different arbitrary packet losses. Recently, the adoption of FEC error control method has been boosted by the introduction of powerful Application Layer FEC (AL-FEC) codes. Furthermore, several works have emerged aiming to address the efficient application of AL-FEC protection introducing deterministic or randomized online algorithms. In this work we propose a novel AL-FEC scheme based on online algorithms forced by the well stated AL-FEC policy online problem. We present an algorithm which exploits feedback capabilities of the mobile users regarding the outcome of a transmission, and adapts the introduced protection respectively. Moreover, we provide an extensive analysis of the proposed AL-FEC algorithm accompanied by a performance evaluation against common error protection schemes.
2019-11-25
Abdessalem, Marwa Ben, Zribi, Amin, Matsumoto, Tadashi, Bouallègue, Ammar.  2018.  LDPC-based Joint Source-Channel-Network Coding for the Multiple Access Relay Channel. 2018 6th International Conference on Wireless Networks and Mobile Communications (WINCOM). :1–6.
In this work, we investigate the MARC (Multiple Access Relay Channel) setup, in which two Markov sources communicate to a single destination, aided by one relay, based on Joint Source Channel Network (JSCN) LDPC codes. In addition, the two source nodes compress the information sequences with an LDPC source code. The compressed symbols are directly transmitted to both a relay and a destination nodes in two transportation phases. Indeed, the relay performs the concatenation of the received compressed sequences to obtain a recovered sequence, which is encoded with an LDPC channel code, before being forwarded to the destination. At the receiver, we propose an iterative joint decoding algorithm that exploits the correlation between the two sources-relay data and takes into account the errors occurring in the sources-relay links to estimate the source data. We show based on simulation results that the JSCN coding and decoding scheme into a MARC setup achieves a good performance with a gain of about 5 dB compared to a conventional LDPC code.
2018-10-26
Li, J., Hua, C..  2017.  RaptorQ code based concurrent transmissions in dual connectivity LTE network. 2017 9th International Conference on Wireless Communications and Signal Processing (WCSP). :1–6.

Dual Connectivity(DC) is one of the key technologies standardized in Release 12 of the 3GPP specifications for the Long Term Evolution (LTE) network. It attempts to increase the per-user throughput by allowing the user equipment (UE) to maintain connections with the MeNB (master eNB) and SeNB (secondary eNB) simultaneously, which are inter-connected via non-ideal backhaul. In this paper, we focus on one of the use cases of DC whereby the downlink U-plane data is split at the MeNB and transmitted to the UE via the associated MeNB and SeNB concurrently. In this case, out-of-order packet delivery problem may occur at the UE due to the delay over the non-ideal backhaul link, as well as the dynamics of channel conditions over the MeNB-UE and SeNB-UE links, which will introduce extra delay for re-ordering the packets. As a solution, we propose to adopt the RaptorQ FEC code to encode the source data at the MeNB, and then the encoded symbols are separately transmitted through the MeNB and SeNB. The out-of-order problem can be effectively eliminated since the UE can decode the original data as long as it receives enough encoded symbols from either the MeNB or SeNB. We present detailed protocol design for the RaptorQ code based concurrent transmission scheme, and simulation results are provided to illustrate the performance of the proposed scheme.