This invention relates generally to digital communications, and more particularly adaptively coding signals for nonlinear channels.
Forward error correction (FEC) coding can reduce errors caused by noisy channels. FEC coding can be optimized by curve fitting with an extrinsic information transfer (EXIT) chart. When the channel state is time varying, the FEC coding should be changed according to the channel state. This is usually done by using adaptive coding and modulations. However, none of the existing adaptive coding methods can adjust for nonlinear channels which limits the advantage of FEC coding, especially in optical communications.
Optical communications have different characteristics than wireless communications. First, the interaction between the light signal and medium is complex. Second, optical signals are typically transmitted via a unidirectional optical fiber. Hence, optical networks use one channel from the transmitter to the receiver, and another channel from the receiver to the transmitter. Thus, the two channels are asymmetric, unlike in wireless communications, and the reverse channel does not mirror the forward channel. However, optical channels do not vary as much as wireless channels over time. Thus, channel states tend to be effective for longer time periods, and instantaneous channel state is less critical.
Adaptive precoding performs amplitude, phase control and data control to reduce errors b using a priori information of the channel state. Methods for precoding include Tomlinson-Harashima precoding, dirty paper coding, trellis shaping, time reversal precoding, inverse channel filtering, vector perturbation and predistortion. None of those methods are suited for complex time varying nonlinear channels.
Digital back-propagation (DBP) can be used for nonlinear channels in optical communications. However, DBP has many drawbacks. DBP is weak against stochastic noise, needs high-complexity operations, and a parameter mismatch to the actual channel state causes additional distortion.
In linear channels, it is known that the encoding and decoding complexity is significantly decreased, and the error probability is considerably reduced when feedback information from the receiver is available at the transmitter. An automatic-repeat request (ARQ) is one example of such. The well known Schalkwijk-Kailath (S-K) feedback coding scheme achieves channel capacity at a doubly-exponential decaying error probability without any FEC coding. However, there is no successful applications, and unified theory about the use of feedback for nonlinear channels.
Embodiments of the invention provide an adaptive coding for linear and nonlinear channels to improve reliability and efficiency in digital communications networks. The method monitors channel statistics to generate and analyze an extrinsic information transfer (EXIT) chart of the channels. The channel statistics are fed back to the transmitter to adapt forward error correction (FEC) preceding and encoding.
One embodiment of the invention provides parametric analysis of nonlinear channel statistics by using a Gaussian mixture model (GMM). The statistical parameters are estimated by an expectation-maximization (EM) process. For nonparametric analysis, the channel statistics are represented by a multi-dimensional histogram of the multi-variate received signals to build several moments (mean, variance, skewness, etc.).
Using either parametric or nonparametric statistics, the EXIT curve is obtained by another histogram of extrinsic mutual information, given a priori mutual information to adapt the FEC coding.
One embodiment of the invention optimizes low-density parity-check (LDPC) codes, based on the EXIT chart information available at the transmitter. The degree distribution of LDPC variable nodes and check nodes are redesigned by curve fitting of the EXIT chart, with a consideration of practical decoder aspects, including a maximum number of iterations, fixed-point arithmetic precision, and finite length of codes.
Another embodiment of the invention provides an automatic repeat request (ARQ) based on Schalkwijk-Kailath (S-K) feedback coding generalized for nonlinear channels by feeding back the received signal. The transmitter adds a weighted received signal to the encoded signal, which can exponentially decrease an equivalent nonlinear distortion.
Another embodiment of the invention adapts precoding (e.g., trellis shaping), which intentionally adapts the data so that the transmitting signal is more preferable for nonlinear channels to reduce distortion. The optimal precoding can be redesigned by using statistical information of the channel, and a regenerative model based on GMM and Volterra series expansion.
Embodiments of the invention provide adaptive coding for linear and nonlinear channels to improve reliability and efficiency in digital communications networks.
Method and Network
The transmitter has data 111 for an FEC encoder 400. The encoded data can be adapted by a precoding block 113, and are transmitted after modulation 114 as a signal, e.g., an optical or radio signal, via a linear, nonlinear or noisy channel 130.
A distorted received signal 101 is detected 121 at the receiver 120, e.g., by an equalizer. The detected signal is FEC decoded 122 to reduce errors. The FEC decoded information can be fed back to the detector block to achieve turbo loop gains 125.
The output of the FEC decoder is used to decide 123 the transmitted data. The decision can be monitored by an error checker 124. An ARQ is generated 144 when the receiver detects errors in the decoded data.
Channel Statistics
The invention improves the reliability and efficiency using channel state information (CSI) The method analyzes 200 the channel statistics using the received signal 101. An EXIT chart is generated and analyzed 142 by measuring a histogram of the detection output given the FEC decoder feedback information.
The channel statistics 115 are fed back to the transmitter so that the precoder can be adapted according to the channel state.
The EXIT chart information 143 is used by the transmitter so that the FEC codebook is improved according to the channel state.
Then, the ARQ can cause retransmission with an improved modulation format.
A parametric Gaussian mixture model (GMM) 220 represents the histogram analytically. The GMM his multiple parameters to estimate for well describing the histogram. The GMM is estimated by an expectation-maximization (EM) process 230, which is an iterative solution of an approximate maximum likelihood (ML).
In the expectation step, the likelihoods of the estimate are determined, while the estimate is updated to locally maximize the likelihoods in the maximization step. The received signals are typically correlated, and hence, the effective dimensionality can often be reduced by principle component analysis (PCA) or linear discrimination analysis (LDA). Alternative to the parametric GMM, other model can be used.
The EXIT curve is obtained by another histogram of the extrinsic mutual information given a priori mutual information to adapt the FEC coding.
Optimization of LDPC Codes
The EXIT curve is shifted 320 by adding a noise margin so that the adapted LDPC coder can still operate in noisy conditions caused by receiver imperfection, such as a circuit noise, channel estimate error, and precision loss. The shifted EXIT curve is combined 330 with the EXIT curve of the variable node decoder, where the curve is predetermined by fixed-point operation decoding simulations. The obtained curves and the EXIT curve of check node decoder are used to optimize 340 the degree distribution of the LDPC coder.
The conventional optimization performs curve-fitting with linear programming. In contrast the embodiments of the invention directly use the iteration trajectory, rather than the curve fitting so that the error probability is less than a predefined threshold, e.g. 10−15, within the maximum number of turbo loop iterations 125, e.g., five times. The coding rate can be optimized at the same time. The coding optimization can be done, e.g., by a modified density evolution.
LDPC Coding
For turbo loop operations, the log-likelihood ratio (LLR) 405 information from detector can be updated by turbo loop multiplexers 440, which pass belief information from the variable node decoders to the adjacent variable node decoders. Such multiplexers can be implemented by conditional adders when the turbo equalization is approximated by maximum-logarithmic (max-log) functions.
S-K Feedback for ARQ
Another embodiment of the invention the ARQ 144 is based on the S-K feedback coding, generalized for nonlinear channels by feeding back the received signal 101.
Adaptive Coding
The other embodiment of the invention provides an adaptive precoding based on trellis shaping, which intentionally adapts the data 111 so that the transmitting signal is preferable for nonlinear channels to reduce distortion.
When no precoding is used, the FEC encoded data 601 is directly fed to the modulation block 114 via the switch 602.
If the receiver has the channel statistics and regenerative GMM model, with the help of Volterra series expansion 670, then the FEC encoded data are fed, via a trellis shaping block 620, to the modulation block 114.
In the trellis shaping block, the FEC encoded data are encoded by an inverse parity check matrix 630 of a convolutional code. The parity check output is summed 640 with other encoded data, which is an output of a corresponding generator matrix 650 generated from auxiliary data 660. The combined data are then modulated 114 and transmitted via the channel 130.
The auxiliary data 660 are optimized so that the transmitted signal can minimize the nonlinear distortion in the channel by using the regenerative model of GMM and Volterra series expansion 670. This is done by a Viterbi process to search for the optimal data which minimize the distortion power.
The receiver uses the parity check to remove the auxiliary data. An analogous method can work for any other precoding schemes, such as vector purtebation.
Although the invention has been described by way of examples of preferred embodiments, it is to be understood that various other adaptations and modifications can be made within the spirit and scope of the invention. Therefore, it is the object of the appended claims to cover all such variations and modifications as come within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
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