PhD defence - Seyed Ali Hesammohseni

Monday, May 9, 2016 1:30 pm - 1:30 pm EDT (GMT -04:00)

Candidate

Seyed Ali Hesammohseni

Title

Practical interference management for Gaussian networks

Supervisors

Catherine Gebotys and Mohamed Oussama Damen

Abstract

Increasing demand for bandwidth intensive activities on high-penetration wireless hand-held personal devices, combined with their processing power and advanced radio features, has necessitated a new look at the problems of resource provisioning and distributed management of coexistence in wireless networks. Information theory, as the science of studying the ultimate limits of communication efficiency, plays an important role in outlining guiding principles in the design and analysis of such communication schemes. Network Information theory, the branch of information theory that investigates problems of multiuser and distributed nature in information transmission is ideally poised to answer questions about the design and analysis of multiuser communication systems. In the past few years, there have been major advances in network information theory, in particular in the generalized degrees of freedom framework for asymptotic analysis and interference alignment which have led to constant gap to capacity results for Gaussian interference channels. Unfortunately, practical adoption of these results has been slowed by their reliance on unrealistic assumptions like perfect channel state information at the transmitter and intricate constructions based on alignment over transcendental dimensions of real numbers. It is therefore necessary to devise transmission methods and coexistence schemes that fall under the umbrella of existing interference management and cognitive radio toolbox and deliver close to optimal performance.

In this thesis we work on the theme of designing and characterizing the performance of conceptually simple transmission schemes that are robust and achieve performance that is close to optimal. In particular, our work is broadly divided into two parts. In the first part, looking at cognitive radio networks, we seek to relax the assumption of non-causal knowledge of primary user’s message at the secondary user’s transmitter. We study a cognitive channel model based on Gaussian interference channel that doesn’t assume anything about users other than primary’s priority over secondary in reaching its desired quality of service. We characterize this quality of service requirement as a minimum rate that the primary should be able to achieve. Studying the achievable performance of simple encoding and decoding schemes in this scenario, we propose a few different simple encoding schemes and explore different decoder designs. We show that surprisingly all these schemes achieve the same rate region. Next, we study the problem of rate maximization faced by the secondary user subject to primary’s QoS constraint. We show that this problem is not convex or smooth in general. We then use the symmetry properties of the problem to reduce its solution to a feasibly implementable line search. We also provide numerical results to demonstrate the performance of the scheme.

Continuing on the theme of simple yet well-performing schemes for wireless networks, in the second part of the thesis, we direct our attention from two-user cognitive networks to the problem of smart interference management in large wireless networks. Here, we study the problem of interference-aware wireless link scheduling. Link scheduling is the problem of allocating a set of transmission requests into as small a set of time slots as possible such that all transmissions satisfy some condition of feasibility. The feasibility criterion has traditionally been lack of pair of links that interfere too much. This makes the problem amenable to solution using graph theoretical tools. Inspired by the recent results that the simple approach of treating interference as noise is GDOF-optimal and even within a constant gap of capacity for a large class of Gaussian interference networks we study the problem of scheduling links under a set Signal to Interference plus Noise Ratio (SINR) constraint. We show that for nodes distributed in a metric space and obeying path loss channel model, a refined framework based on combining geometric and graph theoretic results can be devised to analyze the problem of finding the feasible sets of transmissions for a given level of desired SINR. We use this general framework to devise a link scheduling algorithm that is provably within a logarithmic factor of the best possible schedule. Numerical simulations confirm that this approach outperforms other recently proposed SNR-based approaches. Finally, we conclude by identifying open problems and possible directions for extending these results.