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Cache-Aided Interference Channels

TLDR
In this article, the authors consider an interference channel in which each transmitter is equipped with an isolated cache memory, and they show that through careful joint design of these phases, they can reap three distinct benefits from caching: a load balancing gain, an interference cancellation gain and an interference alignment gain.
Abstract
Over the past decade, the bulk of wireless traffic has shifted from speech to content. This shift creates the opportunity to cache part of the content in memories closer to the end users, for example in base stations. Most of the prior literature focuses on the reduction of load in the backhaul and core networks due to caching, i.e., on the benefits caching offers for the wireline communication link between the origin server and the caches. In this paper, we are instead interested in the benefits caching can offer for the wireless communication link between the caches and the end users. To quantify the gains of caching for this wireless link, we consider an interference channel in which each transmitter is equipped with an isolated cache memory. Communication takes place in two phases, a content placement phase followed by a content delivery phase. The objective is to design both the placement and the delivery phases to maximize the rate in the delivery phase in response to any possible user demands. Focusing on the three-user case, we show that through careful joint design of these phases, we can reap three distinct benefits from caching: a load balancing gain, an interference cancellation gain, and an interference alignment gain. In our proposed scheme, load balancing is achieved through a specific file splitting and placement, producing a particular pattern of content overlap at the caches. This overlap allows to implement interference cancellation. Further, it allows us to create several virtual transmitters, each transmitting a part of the requested content, which increases interference-alignment possibilities.

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The Exact Rate-Memory Tradeoff for Caching With Uncoded Prefetching

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Caching UAV Assisted Secure Transmission in Hyper-Dense Networks Based on Interference Alignment

TL;DR: In this paper, UAV assisted secure transmission for scalable videos in hyper-dense networks via caching is studied and the feasibility conditions of the proposed scheme are derived, and the secrecy performance is analyzed.
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Deep-Reinforcement-Learning-Based Optimization for Cache-Enabled Opportunistic Interference Alignment Wireless Networks

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The Role of Caching in Future Communication Systems and Networks

TL;DR: Caching has been studied for more than 40 years and has recently received increased attention from industry and academia as mentioned in this paper, with the following goal: to convince the reader that content caching is an exciting research topic for the future communication systems and networks.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Interference Alignment and Degrees of Freedom of the $K$ -User Interference Channel

TL;DR: For the fully connected K user wireless interference channel where the channel coefficients are time-varying and are drawn from a continuous distribution, the sum capacity is characterized as C(SNR)=K/2log (SNR)+o(log( SNR), which almost surely has K/2 degrees of freedom.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Capacity Region of the Gaussian Multiple-Input Multiple-Output Broadcast Channel

TL;DR: A new notion of an enhanced broadcast channel is introduced and is used jointly with the entropy power inequality, to show that a superposition of Gaussian codes is optimal for the degraded vector broadcast channel and that DPC is ideal for the nondegraded case.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fundamental Limits of Caching

TL;DR: This paper proposes a novel coded caching scheme that exploits both local and global caching gains, leading to a multiplicative improvement in the peak rate compared with previously known schemes, and argues that the performance of the proposed scheme is within a constant factor of the information-theoretic optimum for all values of the problem parameters.
Journal ArticleDOI

Communication Over MIMO X Channels: Interference Alignment, Decomposition, and Performance Analysis

TL;DR: It is shown that by using mixed design schemes, rather than decomposition schemes, and taking the statistical properties of the interference terms into account, the power offset of the system can be improved.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

FemtoCaching: Wireless video content delivery through distributed caching helpers

TL;DR: The theoretical contribution of this paper lies in formalizing the distributed caching problem, showing that this problem is NP-hard, and presenting approximation algorithms that lie within a constant factor of the theoretical optimum.
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