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Codebook

About: Codebook is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 8492 publications have been published within this topic receiving 115995 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed two basic criteria for the hierarchical codebook design, and devised an efficient hierarchical code book by jointly exploiting sub-array and deactivation (turning-off) antenna processing techniques, where closed-form expressions are provided to generate the codebook.
Abstract: In millimeter-wave communication, large antenna arrays are required to achieve high power gain by steering toward each other with narrow beams, which poses the problem to efficiently search the best beam direction in the angle domain at both Tx and Rx sides. As the exhaustive search is time consuming, hierarchical search has been widely accepted to reduce the complexity, and its performance is highly dependent on the codebook design. In this paper, we propose two basic criteria for the hierarchical codebook design, and devise an efficient hierarchical codebook by jointly exploiting sub-array and deactivation (turning-off) antenna processing techniques, where closed-form expressions are provided to generate the codebook. Performance evaluations are conducted under different system and channel models. Results show superiority of the proposed codebook over the existing alternatives.

293 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper proposes a universal codebook design for correlated channels when channel statistical information is known at the transmitter that is robust to channel statistics and is implemented by maps that can rotate and scale spherical caps on the Grassmannian manifold.
Abstract: The full diversity gain provided by a multi-antenna channel can be achieved by transmit beamforming and receive combining. This requires the knowledge of channel state information (CSI) at the transmitter which is difficult to obtain in practice. Quantized beamforming where fixed codebooks known at both the transmitter and the receiver are used to quantize the CSI has been proposed to solve this problem. Most recent works focus attention on limited feedback codebook design for the uncorrelated Rayleigh fading channel. Such designs are sub-optimal when used in correlated channels. In this paper, we propose systematic codebook design for correlated channels when channel statistical information is known at the transmitter. This design is motivated by studying the performance of pure statistical beamforming in correlated channels and is implemented by maps that can rotate and scale spherical caps on the Grassmannian manifold. Based on this study, we show that even statistical beamforming is near-optimal if the transmitter covariance matrix is ill-conditioned and receiver covariance matrix is well-conditioned. This leads to a partitioning of the transmit and receive covariance spaces based on their conditioning with variable feedback requirements to achieve an operational performance level in the different partitions. When channel statistics are difficult to obtain at the transmitter, we propose a universal codebook design (also implemented by the rotation-scaling maps) that is robust to channel statistics. Numerical studies show that even few bits of feedback, when applied with our designs, lead to near perfect CSI performance in a variety of correlated channel conditions.

290 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
I.A. Gerson1, M.A. Jasiuk1
03 Apr 1990
TL;DR: The vector sum excited linear prediction speech coder is presented, and it utilizes a codebook with a structure that allows for a very efficient search procedure.
Abstract: The vector sum excited linear prediction speech coder is presented. It utilizes a codebook with a structure that allows for a very efficient search procedure. Other advantages of the VSELP codebook structure are discussed, and a detailed description of an 8-kb/s VSELP coder is given. This coder was selected by the Telecommunications Industry Association (TIA) as the standard for use in North American digital cellular telephone systems. The coder uses two VSELP excitation codebooks, a gain quantizer which is robust to channel errors, and a novel adaptive pre/postfilter arrangement. >

288 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper deals with design and performance analysis of transmit beamformers for multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems based on bandwidth-limited information that is fed back from the receiver to the transmitter.
Abstract: This paper deals with design and performance analysis of transmit beamformers for multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems based on bandwidth-limited information that is fed back from the receiver to the transmitter. By casting the design of transmit beamforming based on limited-rate feedback as an equivalent sphere vector quantization (SVQ) problem, multiantenna beamformed transmissions through independent and identically distributed (i.i.d.) Rayleigh fading channels are first considered. The rate-distortion function of the vector source is upper-bounded, and the operational rate-distortion performance achieved by the generalized Lloyd's algorithm is lower-bounded. Although different in nature, the two bounds yield asymptotically equivalent performance analysis results. The average signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) performance is also quantified. Finally, beamformer codebook designs are studied for correlated Rayleigh fading channels, and a low-complexity codebook design that achieves near-optimal performance is derived.

288 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
23 May 1989
TL;DR: The authors present a 16-band subband coder arranged as four equal-width subbands in each dimension, which uses an empirically derived perceptual masking model, to set noise-level targets not only for each subband but also for each pixel in a given subband.
Abstract: The authors present a 16-band subband coder arranged as four equal-width subbands in each dimension, It uses an empirically derived perceptual masking model, to set noise-level targets not only for each subband but also for each pixel in a given subband. The noise-level target is used to set the quantization levels in a DPCM (differential pulse code modulation) quantizer. The output from the DPCM quantizer is then encoded, using an entropy-based coding scheme, in either 1*1, 1*2, or 2*2 pixel blocks. The type of encoding depends on the statistics in each 4*4 subblock of a particular subband. One set of codebooks, consisting of less than 100000 entries, is used for all images, and the codebook subset used for any given image is dependent on the distribution of the quantizer outputs for that image. A block elimination algorithm takes advantage of the peaky spatial energy distribution of subbands to avoid using bits for quiescent parts of a given subband. Using this system, high-quality output is obtainable at bit rates from 0.1 to 0.9 bits/pixel, and nearly transparent quality requires 0.3 to 1.5 bits/pixel. >

284 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023217
2022495
2021237
2020383
2019432
2018364