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Journal ArticleDOI

Cooperative diversity in wireless networks: Efficient protocols and outage behavior

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TLDR
Using distributed antennas, this work develops and analyzes low-complexity cooperative diversity protocols that combat fading induced by multipath propagation in wireless networks and develops performance characterizations in terms of outage events and associated outage probabilities, which measure robustness of the transmissions to fading.
Abstract
We develop and analyze low-complexity cooperative diversity protocols that combat fading induced by multipath propagation in wireless networks. The underlying techniques exploit space diversity available through cooperating terminals' relaying signals for one another. We outline several strategies employed by the cooperating radios, including fixed relaying schemes such as amplify-and-forward and decode-and-forward, selection relaying schemes that adapt based upon channel measurements between the cooperating terminals, and incremental relaying schemes that adapt based upon limited feedback from the destination terminal. We develop performance characterizations in terms of outage events and associated outage probabilities, which measure robustness of the transmissions to fading, focusing on the high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) regime. Except for fixed decode-and-forward, all of our cooperative diversity protocols are efficient in the sense that they achieve full diversity (i.e., second-order diversity in the case of two terminals), and, moreover, are close to optimum (within 1.5 dB) in certain regimes. Thus, using distributed antennas, we can provide the powerful benefits of space diversity without need for physical arrays, though at a loss of spectral efficiency due to half-duplex operation and possibly at the cost of additional receive hardware. Applicable to any wireless setting, including cellular or ad hoc networks-wherever space constraints preclude the use of physical arrays-the performance characterizations reveal that large power or energy savings result from the use of these protocols.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Max-Max Relay Selection for Relays with Buffers

TL;DR: This paper provides a comprehensive analysis of the outage and symbol error probabilities of both MMRS and HRS for a decode-and-forward protocol in Rayleigh fading and reveals that BRS, HRS, and MMRS achieve the same diversity gain.
Journal ArticleDOI

Channel Estimation for Amplify and Forward Relay Based Cooperation Diversity Systems

TL;DR: Issues such as the estimator design, pilot symbol spacing based upon realistic channel models, and an approximate bit error rate (BER) analysis that accounts for imperfect channel estimation are addressed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cognitive multiple access via cooperation: Protocol design and performance analysis

TL;DR: The analysis reveals that the throughput region of the proposed cognitive multiple-access strategy is a subset of its maximum stable throughput region, which is different from random access, where both regions are conjectured to be identical.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Spectral Efficient Signaling for Half-duplex Relay Channels

TL;DR: This work considers a relaying protocol where two half-duplex relays alternately forward messages from a source terminal to a destination terminal (two-path relaying), and it is shown that the protocol can recover a significant portion of the halfduplex loss.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cooperative wireless communications: a cross-layer approach

TL;DR: In cooperative communications, multiple nodes in a wireless network work together to form a virtual antenna array to exploit the spatial diversity of the traditional MIMO techniques without each node necessarily having multiple antennas.
References
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Elements of information theory

TL;DR: The author examines the role of entropy, inequality, and randomness in the design of codes and the construction of codes in the rapidly changing environment.
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Digital Communications

Book

Wireless Communications: Principles and Practice

TL;DR: WireWireless Communications: Principles and Practice, Second Edition is the definitive modern text for wireless communications technology and system design as discussed by the authors, which covers the fundamental issues impacting all wireless networks and reviews virtually every important new wireless standard and technological development, offering especially comprehensive coverage of the 3G systems and wireless local area networks (WLANs).
Journal ArticleDOI

Capacity of Multi‐antenna Gaussian Channels

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the use of multiple transmitting and/or receiving antennas for single user communications over the additive Gaussian channel with and without fading, and derive formulas for the capacities and error exponents of such channels, and describe computational procedures to evaluate such formulas.

Digital communications

J.E. Mazo
TL;DR: This month's guest columnist, Steve Bible, N7HPR, is completing a master’s degree in computer science at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California, and his research area closely follows his interest in amateur radio.
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