The drawings accompanying and forming part of this specification are included to depict certain aspects of the invention. The invention may be better understood by reference to one or more of these drawings in combination with the description presented herein. It should be noted that the features illustrated in the drawings are not necessarily drawn to scale.
The following detailed description of the invention refers to the accompanying drawings. The description includes exemplary embodiments, not excluding other embodiments, and changes may be made to the embodiments described without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. The following detailed description does not limit the invention. Instead, the scope of the invention is defined by the appended claims.
The present invention discloses a method and system for improving the performance of suboptimal trellis-based decoders employing the Viterbi algorithm by incorporating the information about the structure of the messages in the decoding process. The present invention is applicable to all types of trellis-based decoders for tail-biting trellis code.
The method disclosed in the present invention takes advantage of the knowledge about a predetermined field in a message. The information is used either to improve the performance of a decoder or to reduce the complexity of the decoder. The decoder proposed in the present invention is programmable, i.e., the decoder can decode messages with different types of predetermined fields of various lengths and at various locations.
The method disclosed in the present invention exploits the information about the structure of a message to improve the performance of a trellis-based decoder. One such structure is the control message of communication standards, such as IEEE 802.16 (WiMax), which usually includes predetermined fields of known sizes. The bits in a predetermined field are usually set to a predetermined value (e.g. zero).
A control message may have multiple predetermined fields at several locations in a message.
In a WiMax wireless communications system, the FCH is convolutionally encoded using tail-biting termination. The encoder has six memory cells, which means that there are 64 possible states. In other words, the starting or terminating state has a probability of 1/64 being in any of the 64 states.
By knowing that there is a 4-bit predetermined field in the FCH, the disclosed method reduces the number of possible states of a trellis-based decoder. Assuming that the reserved bits in the predetermined field are all set to zero, the number of states is reduced to 4. By setting the four reserved bits to zero, the numbers representing the starting and terminating states are multiples of 16. In other words, the starting and terminating states are one or two of the following states—{0,16,32,48}.
The term “the state with reduced uncertainty” (SRU) refers to a set of states that are associated with a predetermined field. The maximum likelihood path passes through one of these states by the end of the predetermined field.
Each SRU is associated with a time instance determined by the location of the predetermined state. The values of the states in an SRU are determined by the values of the bits in predetermined fields. Effectively, the information about each predetermined field reduces the number of states that the maximum likelihood path might pass through at the end of the predetermined field. As a result the probability that the maximum likelihood path passes through one of the states in the SRU increases and thus the uncertainty is reduced.
The actual value of a predetermined bit is inconsequential as long as it is known a prior by the decoder. The non-zero predetermined bits change the SRU, but its size remains intact. The performance improvement or complexity reduction only depends on the size of the SRU. 10030] A decoder can use the SRU in various ways. For example, a trellis-based decoder for tail-biting (TB) trellis codes performs the VA algorithm only in the states of the SRU rather than all possible states. In the example described above, the VA algorithm only needs to repeat four times rather than 64 times.
The level of reduction in the complexity of a decoder depends on the number of bits in a predetermined field in a message and the number of memory cells (equivalent to the number of states) of the trellis code. As a result, the trellis-based decoder for TB trellis codes does not guarantee that it always reduces the complexity to the same degree. However, it is possible to take advantage of the SRU in sub-optimal trellis-based decoders for TB trellis codes.
A trellis-based decoder for convolutional codes is modeled and evaluated based on the level of its complexity and performance. The information about the SRU can be used to either reduce the complexity or improve the performance of a decoder. It is feasible to devise a decoder with a tradeoff between the performance and complexity.
A sub-optimal trellis-based decoder for TB trellis codes improves its performance by using the SRU to reduce the uncertainty in the initialization process. Depending on the number of states of trellis codes and the length of a message, most sub-optimal trellis-based decoders for TB trellis codes perform the VA algorithm more than once over the whole length of the message or part of the message in order to achieve a level of performance close to that of an optimal trellis-based decoder for TB trellis codes. For a short message that has a trellis code with a large number of states, the VA algorithm may be performed over the whole message twice or three times.
After a trellis-based decoder initializes the states based on the information about the SRU, its complexity is reduced. The decoder achieves similar performance as an optimal trellis-based decoder for TB trellis codes does, but it performs the VA algorithm with fewer iterations.
For the SRU of small size, the trellis-based decoder could run the VA algorithm once and then traces back (i.e. terminates the decoder) from the state that has the best metric at the end of the trellis. In this case, the complexity of the decoder is reduced by some degree and the level of performance is also improved to some degree.
The message structure is described in
In step 420, the location (time instance) of an encoded message sequence is selected. Because the message is terminated using a tail-biting method, the trellis representing the message is circular. In other words, the decoding algorithm such as the VA continues onto the beginning of the message after the end of the message is approached. Because of this property, the decoding process can start at any location in the encoded message sequence. This explains why
In step 430, the decoding process starts from the selected location. The decoding process continues until the message is decoded and the terminating state of the decoder coincides with the starting state. Taking advantage of the SRU, the decoding process can start from the field next to the right of the predetermined filed.
In step 510, multiple SRUs are generated. Each of the SRUs corresponds to one predetermined filed. In step 520, one of the SRUs is selected as the primary SRU. Because the location and the size of each of the multiple predetermined fields are known to the trellis-based decoder, the trellis-based decoder can use this additional information to further improve the performance of the decoding process. One way to utilize the information about the structure of the message is to select a SRU with the smallest size.
Assume that there are two predetermined fields with predetermined bits K1 and K2, and K2>K1. Let SRU1 represent a reduced set of states corresponding to the first predetermined field. Let SRU2 represent a reduced set of states corresponding to the second predetermined field. Because SRU2 is the smaller of the two, tail-biting decoding is performed based on SRU2.
The metric of a state in the trellis-based decoder is set depending on whether it is in SRU2. Each of the states in SRU2 is assigned the same metric, i.e., zero. This is equivalent to making the probabilities of all the states in SRU2 equal. Let the probabilities of the other states be set to the minimum or the largest negative number in logarithmic metric calculations.
Step 530 shows that at a predetermined time instance, the trellis-based decoder sets the metrics of the states that do not belong to SRU1 in such a way that the probabilities of these states are the minimum. This is equivalent to setting such states to the smallest number, or the largest negative number in logarithmic metric calculations. This action effectively prunes the trellis to eliminate the invalid candidate paths. This is because the maximum likelihood path must pass through one of the states that belong to SRU1 at the predetermined time instance.
In step 540, the decoding process continues until the message is decoded and the terminating state of the decoder coincides with the starting state.
In step 610, a zero-padding method is applied to the message by inserting M zero bits at the end of the message. The size of the memory cells of the trellis code is M. In essence, the M zero tail bits create an SRU with a size of one, and the only element in the SRU is the all-zero state.
In step 620, the trellis-based decoder employs a conventional VA algorithm to decode the encoded message. In step 630, the trellis-based decoder sets the metric of a state to the smallest number or the largest negative number in logarithmic metric calculations, depending on whether it is in the SRU at a predetermined time instance. This action effectively prunes the trellis to eliminate the invalid paths. As a result the performance of the trellis-based decoder is further improved.
In step 640, the decoding process continues until the message is decoded and the termination state of the trellis-based decoder coincides with the starting state.
The parser module 710 identifies one or more predetermined fields in a message with a known value using the knowledge of the structure of the message. The means 720 generates one or more sets of states with reduced uncertainty (SRUs) based on the values of one or more predetermined fields.
The trellis-based decoder 730 initializes the states based on the information about the SRU of the smallest size and sets the metrics of the states in the SRU in such a way that the probabilities of the states are equal. The trellis-based decoder 730 selects a starting state, which could be any state in the encoded message sequence. Because the encoded message is terminated using a tail-biting method, the trellis representing the message is circular. The trellis-based decoder 730 prunes the trellis to eliminate the invalid paths while decoding the message by setting the metrics of the states that are not in the SRU in such a way that the probabilities of the states are the minimum.
The above illustration provides many different embodiments or embodiments for implementing different features of the invention. Specific embodiments of components and processes are described to help clarify the invention. These are, of course, merely embodiments and are not intended to limit the invention from that described in the claims.
Although the invention is illustrated and described herein as embodied in one or more specific examples, it is nevertheless not intended to be limited to the details shown, since various modifications and structural changes may be made therein without departing from the spirit of the invention and within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims. Accordingly, it is appropriate that the appended claims be construed broadly and in a manner consistent with the scope of the invention, as set forth in the following claims.
The present application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. 60/841,446, which was filed on Aug. 30, 2006.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60841446 | Aug 2006 | US |