This invention relates to the calculation of log-likelihood ratios.
Many forms of data transmission rely on the modulation of a carrier wave at a transmitter. For example, in quadrature modulation, inphase and quadrature signals (I- and Q-signals) specify symbols from a symbol alphabet. Each transmitted symbol maps to one of the symbols of the symbol alphabet and is defined by a phase and amplitude and is associated with a plurality of bits conveyed by the transmitted signal. When the signal is received, it is necessary to demodulate the signal and to determine which of the symbols of the symbol alphabet the transmitted signal correspond to.
The processing of the signal in a receiver and a transmitter, as well as transmitting the signal, introduce imperfections or distortions into the received signal. When the signal is received an estimation is made as to the information content of the received signal. It is desirable to have a statistical indication of how trustworthy this estimate is. One indicator of this is log-likelihood ratios.
When a signal is received, an estimation of transmitted symbols is made and, in this instance, log-likelihood ratios are applied to this estimation process. Here log-likelihood ratios are an indication of the likelihood that a particular bit of the estimated transmitted symbol is a 0 or a 1 and this is represented as λmk, λmk+1, . . . , λmk+m−1 where m=log2(M) and the symbol alphabet comprises M-symbols (i.e. an M-ary modulation scheme).
The calculation of log-likelihood ratios is computationally intensive and in the past it has been necessary to implement different calculation algorithms for different modulation schemes. Furthermore, known receivers calculate the log-likelihood ratios for each bit of each symbol as it is received, which is computationally intensive. It is therefore desirable to reduce the computational complexity of calculating log-likelihood ratios. It is further desirable to be able to easily calculate log-likelihood ratios for a variety of modulation schemes.
Embodiments of the invention provide for a method for deriving one or more coefficients, said coefficients being for use in a calculation of log-likelihood ratios of bits of an estimated transmitted symbol of a predetermined constellation diagram, said constellation diagram being any one of a plurality of constellation diagrams, said method comprising the steps of:
(a) for a bit of a symbol of said constellation diagram, determining a closest further symbol, wherein said further symbol has a complementary value for a corresponding bit; and
(b) deriving said one or more coefficients with reference to said symbol and said further symbol.
Embodiments of the invention are able to derive one or more coefficients used in calculating a log-likelihood ratio of bits of an estimated transmitted symbol of a predetermined constellation diagram where the constellation diagram is any one of a plurality of constellation diagrams. Therefore, the method of these embodiments is equally applicable to more than one constellation diagram. For example, embodiments of the invention may be applied to constellation diagrams corresponding to PSK, PAM, QAM, ASK etc. modulations. Embodiments of the invention are, in particular, applicable to the constellation diagrams of linear modulations. In certain circumstances, linear modulation schemes may be used to approximate non-linear schemes.
It is therefore possible to derive a set of coefficients and store the coefficients for later retrieval in use in respect of multiple modulation schemes. Therefore, a receiver configured to operate according to this method of embodiments of the invention is able to calculate log-likelihood ratios for any one of a plurality of modulation schemes. This is simpler and cheaper than having to calculate log-likelihood ratios separately for each modulation scheme, particularly where the receiver is used to receive and decode signals modulated according to more than one modulation scheme.
Step (a) may be repeated for a plurality of bits of said symbol.
Step (a) may be repeated for a plurality of symbols of said constellation diagram.
Step (a) may comprise the step of deriving no more than a first and a second coefficient corresponding to said bit.
Said first coefficient may comprise a complex difference between symbols and said second coefficient may comprise a difference between energies of symbols.
Embodiments of the invention need derive no more than a first coefficient and a second coefficient for each bit of, the symbol of the constellation diagram. This is significantly simpler than those arrangements where more than two coefficients need be calculated for corresponding bits of a constellation diagram. Furthermore, the first and the second coefficient may be used to calculate log-likelihood ratios for each of the constellation diagrams of the plurality of constellation diagrams. The calculation of the first and the second coefficient could be easily hard-coded and applied to various constellation diagrams. Therefore embodiments of the invention provide a simple and versatile method for calculating log-likelihood ratios.
At least one of said coefficients may include a real part and the other of said coefficients may include an imaginary part.
The first coefficient may include no more than a real part and an imaginary part and the second coefficient may include no more than a real part.
As the first coefficient includes no more than a real part and an imaginary part and the second coefficient includes no more than a real part, embodiments of the invention are simple and easy to implement. Furthermore, the first coefficient and the second coefficient may be used to calculate log-likelihood ratios for each of the plurality of constellation diagrams.
The method may include the step of reducing a number of coefficients, or parts of coefficients, by considering symmetries in said constellation diagram.
Step (a) may be repeated for each bit of each symbol of said constellation diagram.
Said further symbol may be determined with reference to a Gray coding for said symbols of said constellation diagram. Gray coding ensures that the bit labels of adjacent symbols on the constellation diagram vary by the value of only one bit.
The method may include the step of generating a plurality of sets of coefficients according to the aforementioned method, each set of coefficients corresponding to a predetermined constellation diagram, and storing each set in a corresponding store so that each store is associated with a corresponding constellation diagram. This allows for the calculation of log-likelihood ratios for symbols defined according to different modulation schemes.
Further embodiments of the invention extend to an apparatus configured to derive one or more coefficients, said coefficients being for use in a calculation of log-likelihood ratios of bits of an estimated transmitted symbol of a predetermined constellation diagram, said constellation diagram being any one of a plurality of constellation diagrams, said apparatus being configured to:
(a) for a bit of a symbol of said constellation diagram, determine a closest further symbol, wherein said further symbol has a complementary value for a corresponding bit; and
(b) derive said one or more coefficients with reference to said symbol and said further symbol.
The apparatus may be configured to repeat step (a) for a plurality of bits of said symbol.
The apparatus may be configured to repeat step (a) for a plurality of symbols of said constellation diagram.
The apparatus may be configured to derive no more than a first and a second coefficient corresponding to said bit.
Said first coefficient may include no more than a real part and an imaginary part and said second coefficient may include no more than a real part.
The apparatus may be configured to reduce a number of coefficients, or parts of coefficients, by considering symmetries in said constellation diagram.
The apparatus may be configured to repeat step (a) for each bit of each symbol of said constellation diagram.
The apparatus may be configured to determine said further symbol with reference to a Gray coding for said symbols of said constellation diagram.
Said coefficients may include a first coefficient, aj
where σj
The apparatus may be configured to generate a plurality of sets of coefficients, each set of coefficients corresponding to one of said plurality of constellation diagrams, and storing each set in a corresponding store so that each store is associated with a corresponding constellation diagram.
The apparatus may comprise a processor.
According to a further aspect, the invention provides for a method for generating a log-likelihood ratio for a received sample derived from a received signal modulated according to a predetermined modulation scheme with a corresponding constellation diagram which includes the steps of
(a) finding an estimated transmitted symbol by finding a closest symbol of said constellation diagram to said received sample;
(b) retrieving one or more coefficients, wherein said one or more coefficients are retrieved with reference to said closest symbol; and
(c) calculating the log-likelihood ratio on the basis of said one or more retrieved coefficients.
By retrieving coefficients, preferably from a stored table, which are used to calculate log-likelihood ratios, the invention significantly reduces the computational complexity of generating log-likelihood ratios by replacing a significant portion of the calculation with a retrieve operation.
The retrieved coefficients may correspond to a bit of said estimated transmitted symbol, in which case, steps (b) and (c) may be performed for each bit of the estimated transmitted symbol.
Said estimated transmitted symbol may be determined by means of a hard decision. The hard decision may be performed by a slicer.
Step (c) may be calculated with reference to the received sample.
Step (a) may include the step of compensating for a propagation gain and/or an added noise.
Step (b) may include the step of retrieving said one or more coefficients from a selected one of a plurality of tables of coefficients, said table being selected according to an association with said constellation diagram. In this instance, the log-likelihood ratios for signals modulated according to more than one modulation scheme may be calculated by the same apparatus. Each of said tables may correspond to a different modulation scheme.
The coefficients may include a first coefficient, aj
where σj
The method may include the step of generating a table of coefficients, each of said coefficients derived according to the formulae mentioned for aj
where λmk+p is a log-likelihood ratio for a bit at position mk+p (pth bit of the kth processed symbol having m bits), rk is said received sample, gk is a complex channel gain (equivalent channel as seen after multi-path compensation by the LLR computation block) and N0 is the single sided noise power spectral density.
Further embodiments of the invention extend to an apparatus configured to generate a log-likelihood ratio for a received sample derived from a received signal modulated according to a predetermined modulation scheme with a corresponding constellation diagram, said apparatus being configured to:
(a) find an estimated transmitted symbol by estimating a closest symbol of said constellation diagram to said received sample;
(b) retrieve one or more coefficients, wherein said one or more coefficients are retrieved with reference to said estimated closest symbol; and
(c) calculate the log-likelihood ratio on the basis of said one or more retrieved coefficients.
Said retrieved coefficients may correspond to a bit of said estimated transmitted symbol.
The apparatus may be configured to perform in steps (b) and (c) for each bit of the estimated transmitted symbol.
The apparatus may be configured to determine said estimated transmitted symbol by means of a hard decision.
The apparatus may be configured to calculate step (a) with reference to the received sample.
The apparatus may be configured to compensate for a propagation gain and/or an added noise.
The apparatus may be configured to retrieve said one or more coefficients from a selected one of a plurality of tables of coefficients, said table being selected according to an association with said constellation diagram.
The apparatus may comprise a processor.
A further embodiment of the invention extends to a method of calculating a log-likelihood ratio which includes deriving a first coefficient, aj
where σj
where λmk+p is a log-likelihood ratio for a bit at position mk+p, rk in said received sample, gk is a complex channel gain and N0 is a single-sided noise power spectral density.
Further features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following description of embodiments thereof, presented by way of example, and by reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals refer to like parts, and where:—
In
Therefore,
{tilde over (r)}k=gk·sk+{tilde over (w)}k
where
{tilde over (w)}k is complex white Gaussian noise with variance σ2({tilde over (w)})=2·N0 where N0 is the single sided noise power spectral density
gk is a complex channel gain, which decomposes as: gk=√{square root over (2·Es)}·hk, where
Es is the average transmitted energy per symbol and
hk is a complex propagation gain.
It is to be realised that this is a modelling of the transmission, multi-path propagation and equalization of the signal as received at the LLR calculator 22 and therefore incorporates the effects of the processing mentioned above with reference to
It is assumed that gk is known and compensated for by the amplitude/phase correction block 26 after equalization and before entering the slicer 30. Therefore the received sample rk, at the slicer 30 can be expressed as:
where wk is complex white Gaussian noise with variance
The estimated transmitted symbol is one of a plurality of symbols:
ŝk=σj
Furthermore, the estimated transmitted coded bits are divided according to symbol such that the estimated transmitted bit at position mk+p in the transmitted signal corresponds to the bit at the pth position of symbol σj
The expression for the log-likelihood ratio for the bit at position mk+p is:
The following subsets of symbols are defined:
The subset of symbols the pth bit of which is 0: Ωp,0={σnεΩ/βn,p=0}
The subset of symbols the pth bit of which is 1: Ωp,1={σnεΩ/βn,p=1}
The subset of symbols the pth bit of which is the complementary of that of a given symbol σq:
Ω
Then, it is known from Bayes rule that:
Assuming that bits with values 0 and 1 are equally distributed, i.e. that:
P(bmk+p=0)=P(bmk+p=1) (6)
Assuming further that all possible symbols are equally distributed in the estimated received signal:
P(sk=σi)=P(sk=σj) (7)
Since there are conditional relations between the estimated received signal, the received signal and a particular symbol:
A corresponding expression to that of equation (8) exists for P(rk|bmk+p=1) where the sum is then calculated for σnεΩp,1.
Therefore, combining equations (3), (5), (8) and the corresponding expression for P(rk|bmk+p=1), the log-likelihood ratios can be expressed as:
There is a log-sum approximation:
which holds provided that the sum in the left-hand side is dominated by the largest term.
This approximation is applicable to the calculation of log-likelihood ratios, provided that the corresponding channel has a relatively high signal to noise ratio (which will apply in practice due to the aforementioned pre-processing of the signal). Therefore, equation (9) can be rewritten as:
Furthermore, P(rk|sk=σn) can be expressed in terms of the Gaussian distribution:
Then, combining equations (11) and (12), gives the following expression for the log-likelihood ratios:
As stated, the slicer 30 determines the closest symbol to the received sample ŝk=σj
The closest symbol to a symbol detected by the slicer 30 which would result in the pth bit having a complementary value is defined as:
Gray coding is a system of labelling the symbols on a constellation diagram so that a particular symbol varies in its label from adjacent symbols only by the value of one bit. If this labelling is used here:
Equation (13) can then be rewritten as:
which can be seen as:
where:
From equation (17) it is evident that the noise variance 2·N0 is necessary to evaluate the log-likelihood ratios. This may be supplied by a channel estimator or a dedicated noise estimator of the receiver (not shown in the diagrams), or may be estimated (with a bias) at the output of the slicer 30, assuming that the noise is constant over each block, by:
Line 54 denotes the divide between the initialization process (blocks 50 and 52) and the process performed as the transmitted signal is received. In block 56k, which is used to denote a particular time index of the symbol of the received transmission, is set to zero (i.e. this represents the first symbol of the received transmission). In block 58, the closest symbol to the received sample is determined by the slicer 30 in a hard decision.
In block 60p, which denotes a particular bit of the kth symbol, is set to zero, indicating that the first bit of the symbol is considered. The demapper 32 then retrieves the a- and b-coefficients from the table in block 62 for the pth bit of symbol σj
Then, in block 66, the demapper uses the retrieved values for the a- and b-coefficients to determine the log-likelihood ratio for the pth bit according to equation (17). The process then moves to decision block 68 to determine if p is equal to m−1. As stated, a particular symbol encoded according to an M-ary constellation map and will have m=log2(M) bits per symbol. In this instance, the value of p ranges from 0 to m−1 for each received symbol. If p is less than m−1, the process will proceed to block 70 to increment the value of p, and then on to block 62 to repeat the process of blocks 62, 66 and 68 for the next bit of the symbol.
If it is determined that p is equal to m−1 at block 68, the process moves to block 72 where the value of k is incremented and therefore the next received sample is evaluated according to the above process. Although not depicted in
As the values of the a- and b-coefficients are stored in a store in the form of the table, embodiments of the invention display a substantially reduced computational complexity over prior art systems which calculate the log-likelihood ratios for each incoming bit.
Referring back to equation (18), it is to be realised that embodiments of the invention are applicable to many different modulation schemes such as various forms of PSK, QAM, and PAM.
Embodiments of the invention are further applicable to receivers capable of receiving a number of signals modulated according to different modulation schemes. In this instance, during initialization, a plurality of tables will be generated at block 52, each table corresponding to a particular constellation diagram, and therefore to a particular modulation scheme. It is then necessary for the correct table to be accessed when the received signal is processed. A table identification may then be set as a starting parameter before the process starts at block 56, or may be specified when the table is accessed at block 62.
For any M-ary constellation, the coefficient table will require at most 3 M log2(M) real elements to store the required coefficients. However, in practice, this may be reduced. For example in all PSK modulations, all symbols have the same energy and therefore the b-coefficient will be zero. For such a modulation scheme it is necessary to only store the a-coefficients which reduces the overall storage need to two-thirds of the theoretical requirement.
Furthermore, for all PAM modulations the symbols are real and it is therefore unnecessary to store the imaginary parts of the a-coefficients. This too reduces the overall storage need to two-thirds of the theoretical limit.
For all QAM modulations, the symmetries of the diagram can be exploited so that the diagram can be considered as a √{square root over (M)}-PAM scheme both on the I and Q axis. An example of this is described below with reference to
It will be realised therefore that symmetries in any given constellation diagram of a modulation scheme may be utilised to reduce the amount of storage required for the coefficient table.
Referring back to
If the received sample is: rk=I+j·Q,
then, reading the a- and b-coefficients from row 3 of the table in
For the first bit:
For the second bit:
For the third bit:
Storage space can be saved by exploiting symmetries in the constellation diagram. For the first and second bits (an,0 and an,1), the coefficients have the same values every fourth row (same value for σ0 as for σ4, same value for σl as σ5, etc. . . . ). This is illustrated in
For the third bit (an,3), coefficients in successive rows have the same value (same value for σ0 as for σ1, same value for σ2 as σ3, etc. . . . ). This is illustrated in
For the coefficients with the same value, it is not necessary to calculate each instance, but the value may be read from the storage location of the first occurring instance.
As before, Gray coding is used to label the bits of the symbols of the diagram.
It is necessary to only calculate the real part of the a-coefficient and the b-coefficient for the first and second bit positions, reasoning along the I axis. The resulting coefficient table is illustrated in
By way of example, point 80 illustrates a received sample and with reference to which the operation of this embodiment of the invention will be described. The coefficient table of
In this embodiment noise variance is determined by the slicer 30 from a block of received samples rk, as described above.
If the received sample is: rk=I+j·Q,
then, reading the a- and b-coefficients from row 3 of the table in
For the first bit:
For the second bit:
Then again, reading the a- and b-coefficients from row 4 of the table in
For the third bit:
For the fourth bit:
In this case the symmetries have been exploited due to the fact that the constellation is separable: the coefficients for the first two bits are entirely determined by the position of the received sample along the I axis (the position along the Q axis is irrelevant); on the other hand the last two bits are entirely determined by the position of the received sample along the Q axis (the position along the I axis is irrelevant). Furthermore the same labelling convention has been chosen on the I and Q axes: going left to right for the first two bits or bottom to top for the last two bits, successive labels always read (0,1), (1,1), (1, 0) and (0, 0).
In a similar manner, symmetries in other constellation diagrams may be exploited to reduce the number of stored coefficients (or parts of coefficients).
Referring back to equations (17) and (18), the expression for the log-likelihood ratios is:
This expression can be rewritten as:
where .|. denotes the usual scalar product: u|v=e(u·v*)
Line 94 is the vector {right arrow over (x)}. Line 96 is the distance dk,p from rk to line 90 and is represented as:
As a consequence, the magnitude of the log-likelihood ratio can be expressed as:
This provides an expression for the magnitude of the log-likelihood ratio, which can be seen as the distance dk,p from the received sample rk to the decision boundary (line 90) between symbols σj
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0805054.4 | Mar 2008 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB2009/000721 | 3/17/2009 | WO | 00 | 9/16/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2009/115795 | 9/24/2009 | WO | A |
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