Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) is a method for multiple users to share common bandwidth over a communications channel. Instead of dividing the frequency spectrum of the channel into discrete sub-channels (frequency division multiplexing—FDM) or alternating use of a channel over time (time division multiplexing—TDM), CDMA mixes each user's transmission with a spreading code, typically a pseudo-random sequence having a starting point and a progression known by both the transmitter and the receiver. In this fashion, many users can share the same bandwidth at the same time. CDMA is one of methods specified for use in third-generation (3G) mobile communications by the International Telecommunication Union,(see, e.g., “The CDMA 2000 Candidate Submission”, Telecommunications Industry Association TIA TR-45.5 Subcommittee, June 1998). However, systems employing CDMA are typically interference-limited. The interference can arise from the very nature of the systems in which CDMA is used, e.g., cellular telephone, in which it is typically desirable to accommodate multiple users transmitting simultaneously through a common physical channel.
In telecommunications, “multipath” is a propagation phenomenon wherein a signal reaches a receiver by two or more paths. Causes of multipath include atmospheric ducting, ionospheric reflection and refraction, and reflection from objects such as mountains and buildings. The effects of multipath include constructive and destructive interference, and phase shifting of the signal. Interference between signals, e.g., multiple access interference (MAI) can also arise from multiple users sharing a common bandwidth for different services, such as voice and data transmission. Data rate mismatches between users can result in code mismatch. Even in the absence of multipath, this can cause MAI.
Not surprisingly, since CDMA is currently-specified as a multiple-access scheme for 3G cellular telephone systems and methods mitigating the effects of multipath and providing MAI suppression in CDMA environments are highly desirable. Those systems and methods that are less computation-intensive than others are more desirable.
Typically, a multiple-delay-line filter, called a “rake,” is used to coherently combine multipath signals at the receiver. The phase and gain information used to cohere a rake filter typically is provided by a separate equalization function. Rake receivers, while designed to operate in multipath environments, are generally limited in performance by MAI. MAI causes the performance of a conventional rake receiver to degrade rapidly as the number of users are increased in a CDMA system. On the other hand, research in interference (e.g., MAI) suppression has typically focused on data-aided or blind Minimum Mean Square Error (MMSE) receivers, which are sub-optimal in multipath channels.
As required, detailed features and embodiments of the invention are disclosed herein. However, it is to be understood that the disclosed features and embodiments are merely exemplary of the invention that may be embodied in various and alternative forms. The figures are not necessarily to scale, and some features may be exaggerated or minimized to show details of particular components. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein, and any particular combination of these details, are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a basis for claims and as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the invention. This disclosure, while illustrative of preferred embodiments of the invention, describes the invention with respect to Direct Sequence (DS)-CDMA. Preferred embodiments of the invention are also applicable to other modulation types, such as Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) and Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA), as will be apparent to those skilled in the art. Similarly, although binary signaling is used to illustrated enabling embodiments, embodiments of the invention apply to MAI reduction and multipath mitigation generally.
In a Direct Sequence (DS)-CDMA system having K users, user k transmits a baseband signal that can be expressed as:
where:
The spreading sequence can be written as:
where:
For the illustrative embodiments described herein, the spreading code is a square wave sequence with no pulse shaping, therefore the chip sequence is a constant. Assume also, without loss of generality, that user 1 is of interest, and that the receiver has timing information to synchronize to the spreading code of the desired user.
The noiseless distortionless aggregate transmitted signal
Here,
Consider the case where the channel is an additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) channel, so that the distortionless received signal
Substituting Equation (3) for y(i), Equation (4) can be written as:
It is desirable to extract user 1's baseband signal, b1(i), while suppressing the interference represented by the summation of Equation (3). Ideally, one would subtract out the interference terms and then despread by user 1's spreading code,
For an MMSE receiver, receive filter coefficients (denoted by
where:
Solving Equation (6) for
where
Note that computation of the MMSE solution for
The reduced rank Multistage Wiener Filter (MWF) provides performance comparable to a full-rank MMSE solution, but with much fewer computations and with better performance under lower sample support conditions. An MWF filter achieves a convergence speed-up better than achieved with Principal Components (PC) and reduced computational burden relative to PC. This is done by exploiting information contained in both
The MWF can be based on a correlation-subtraction architecture as described in “Efficient Architectures for Implementing Adaptive Algorithms” by Ricks and Goldstein, Proceedings of the 2000 Antenna Applications Symposium, pg. 29-41. Allerton Park, Monticello, Ill., Sep. 20-22, 2000 [RICKS], hereby incorporated herein by reference.
Referring to
The forward recursion equations, as presented in “A Multistage Representation of the Wiener Filter Based on Orthogonal Projections”, Goldstein, Reed, and Scharf, IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, Volume 44, Number 7, November 1998 [GOLDSTEIN] and “Adaptive Reduced-Rank Residual Correlation Algorithms for DS-CDMA Interference Suppression” by Honig and Goldstein, Proceedings of Asilomar, July 1998 [HONIG 1], hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety, along with the initialization and backward recursion equations can be given as:
initialization:
d0(n) and {tilde over (x)}(n) as above;
forward recursion for k=1,2, . . . ,D:
d
k (n)=
backward recursion for k=D, D−1, . . . 1 with eD(n)=dD(n)
e
k-1(n)=dk-1(n)−wk*ek(n)
where Ω denotes the region of sample support used to compute the sample statistics.
In typical applications, the MWF has been limited to environments not overly influenced by multipath, or environments in which multipath correction has been applied at an earlier stage. In these applications, the MWF steering vector is the spreading code of the desired CMDA transmission to be demodulated.
A channel subjected to multipath interference can be modeled in discrete time by an L-tapped delay line having delay coefficients represented by
{circumflex over (r)}(i)=ŷ(i)+
where ŷ=
Substituting for
where ({circumflex over (•)}) denotes convolution of the operand with the channel vector
Exploiting the analogy between Equation (5) for the AWGN channel and Equation (9) for the multipath channel, the MMSE solution in the presence of multipath can be written from the AWGN solution in Equation (7) as:
The MWF solution can be obtained similarly, by setting
In the presence of only AWGN, this reduces to the matched filter (MF) solution,
Simulations of the performance of a receiver of the present invention (an multipath MWF receiver) versus a full rank MMSE receiver and a Rake-only receiver indicate that a multipath MWF receiver operating at a reduced rank performs as well as a full rank MMSE receiver and better than a Rake-only receiver.
The bit estimates can be obtained by multiplying the received signal by the receiver filter coefficients and forming a hard decision. Thus, in the case of MMSE and Rake we compute {circumflex over (b)}1(i)=
In the case of a multipath MWF receiver, the bit estimate is produced at the last stage of the filter and can be written as: {circumflex over (b)}1(i)=∈0(i).
For the Monte Carlo simulation results, unless otherwise indicated, the processing gain is N=32, and the number of users is fixed at K=15. An L=5 tap channel is used to simulate the multipath, using one tap per chip. The number of bits per block is 5000, and the number of blocks is at least 10 (chosen to produce enough errors to obtain a valid statistical bit error rate estimate). The power of the interfering users is set to 6 dB greater than that of the desired user to determine performance in a near/far situation.
Next,
In
In some embodiments, the invention is implemented as a computer program product for adaptive flltering a signal received over a channel subjected to multipath effects. In those embodiments, a computer-readable medium stores at least one program module. The program module determines filter coefficients
where
where
where
is a discrete time estimate of the effect of multipath on the channel and L is the delay spread of the channel for the estimate. In some embodiments, the steering vector of the desired signal is the spreading sequence of the desired signal in a code division multiple access communication system.
In further embodiments, a computer program product for adaptive filtering a signal in accordance with the present invention includes a computer-readable medium storing a program module that determines filter coefficients
where
where
is a discrete time estimate of the effect of multipath on the channel and L is the delay spread of the channel for the estimate. In these embodiments, the steering vector of the desired signal is the spreading sequence of the desired signal in a code division multiple access communication system.
Computer program products of the present invention include a computer-readable medium storing at least one program module that modifies the steering vector. The modified steering vector is formed by the convolution of the steering vector with a vector estimating the effect of multipath on the observed signal. In a first analysis stage each data vector is projected onto the steering vector to form a set of inner products that estimate the part of the data that best corresponds to the steering vector. The inner products are multiplies onto the steering vector to form a set of vector estLrnates of that part of the data that best corresponds to the steering vector. These vector estimates are subtracted from the corresponding data vectors to obtain a projection of the data onto the nullspace of the steering vector.
In at least one adaptive analysis stage a correlation direction vector of the current adaptive stage is calculated between the corresponding inner products and vector differences of an immediately prior analysis stage. Inner products of the current stage are formed by projecting each vector difference of the immediately prior analysis stage onto the correlation direction vector of the current stage; scaled vectors of the current stage are formed by multiplying the inner products of the current stage onto the correlation direction vector of the current stage. The prior stage vector differences arc projected onto the nulispace of the correlation direction vector of the current stage by subtracting each scaled vector of the current stage from the corresponding projection of the prior stage. The steering vector, in some of these embodiments, is the spreading code of a code division multiple access (CDMA) system.
The present application relates to and claims priority to applicant's co-pending provisional patent application 60/421,101 entitled: Method and System for Reduced Rank Adaptive Filtering, filed Oct. 25, 2002 which is incorporated herein in its entirety by reference. The present application is related to pending utility patent application Ser. No. 09/933,004 entitled System and Method for Adaptive Filtering, filed Aug. 21, 2001, which is incorporated herein in its entirety by reference.
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