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Large system performance of linear multiuser receivers in multipath fading channels

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TLDR
The main results involve asymptotic expressions for the signal-to-interference ratio of linear multiuser receivers in the limit of large processing gain, with the number of users divided by the processing gain held constant.
Abstract
A linear multiuser receiver for a particular user in a code-division multiple-access (CDMA) network gains potential benefits from knowledge of the channels of all users in the system. In fast multipath fading environments we cannot assume that the channel estimates are perfect and the inevitable channel estimation errors will limit this potential gain. We study the impact of channel estimation errors on the performance of linear multiuser receivers, as well as the channel estimation problem itself. Of particular interest are the scalability properties of the channel and data estimation algorithms: what happens to the performance as the system bandwidth and the number of users (and hence channels to estimate) grows? Our main results involve asymptotic expressions for the signal-to-interference ratio of linear multiuser receivers in the limit of large processing gain, with the number of users divided by the processing gain held constant. We employ a random model for the spreading sequences and the limiting signal-to-interference ratio expressions are independent of the actual signature sequences, depending only on the system loading and the channel statistics: background noise power, energy profile of resolvable multipaths, and channel coherence time. The effect of channel uncertainty on the performance of multiuser receivers is succinctly captured by the notion of effective interference.

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Citations
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Book

Random Matrix Theory and Wireless Communications

TL;DR: A tutorial on random matrices is provided which provides an overview of the theory and brings together in one source the most significant results recently obtained.
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Random Matrix Methods for Wireless Communications

TL;DR: This book provides an introduction to random matrix theory and shows how it can be used to tackle a variety of problems in wireless communications, including performance analysis of CDMA, MIMO and multi-cell networks, as well as signal detection and estimation in cognitive radio networks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fading channels: how perfect need "perfect side information" be?

TL;DR: The robustness of this communication scheme with respect to errors in the estimation of the fading process is studied, and the degradation in performance that results from such estimation errors is quantified.
Journal ArticleDOI

The impact of frequency-flat fading on the spectral efficiency of CDMA

TL;DR: The spectral efficiency as a function of the number of users per chip, the distribution of the flat fading, and the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) is found for the optimum receiver as well as linear receivers (single-user matched filter, decorrelator, and minimum mean-square error (MMSE).

Adaptive receiver structures for asynchronous CDMA systems

TL;DR: In this paper, an adaptive linear and decision feedback receiver structure for coherent demodulation in asynchronous CDMA systems is proposed. But the adaptive receiver has no knowledge of the signature waveforms and timing of other users.
References
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Book

The algebraic eigenvalue problem

TL;DR: Theoretical background Perturbation theory Error analysis Solution of linear algebraic equations Hermitian matrices Reduction of a general matrix to condensed form Eigenvalues of matrices of condensed forms The LR and QR algorithms Iterative methods Bibliography.
Book

Multiuser Detection

Sergio Verdu
TL;DR: This self-contained and comprehensive book sets out the basic details of multiuser detection, starting with simple examples and progressing to state-of-the-art applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Minimum probability of error for asynchronous Gaussian multiple-access channels

TL;DR: The results show that the proposed multiuser detectors afford important performance gains over conventional single-user systems, in which the signal constellation carries the entire burden of complexity required to achieve a given performance level.
Journal ArticleDOI

Linear multiuser detectors for synchronous code-division multiple-access channels

TL;DR: Under the assumptions of symbol-synchronous transmissions and white Gaussian noise, the authors analyze the detection mechanism at the receiver, comparing different detectors by their bit error rates in the low-background-noise region and by their worst-case behavior in a near-far environment.
Journal ArticleDOI

MMSE interference suppression for direct-sequence spread-spectrum CDMA

TL;DR: It is concluded that MMSE detectors can alleviate the need for stringent power control in CDMA systems, and may be a practical alternative to the matched filter receiver.
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