Impact of Interference in Coexisting Wireless Networks with Applications to Arbitrarily Varying Bidirectional Broadcast Channels

The paradigm shift from an exclusive allocation of frequency bands, one for each system, to a shared use of frequencies comes along with the need of new concepts since interference will be an ubiquitous phenomenon. In this paper, we use the concept of <em>arbitrarily varying channels&a...

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Main Authors: Holger Boche, Rafael F. Wyrembelski
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2012-08-01
Series:Entropy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/14/8/1357
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spelling doaj-0820e493b5744cb48b335eeeb44ff3482020-11-24T23:10:28ZengMDPI AGEntropy1099-43002012-08-011481357139810.3390/e14081357Impact of Interference in Coexisting Wireless Networks with Applications to Arbitrarily Varying Bidirectional Broadcast ChannelsHolger BocheRafael F. WyrembelskiThe paradigm shift from an exclusive allocation of frequency bands, one for each system, to a shared use of frequencies comes along with the need of new concepts since interference will be an ubiquitous phenomenon. In this paper, we use the concept of <em>arbitrarily varying channels</em> to model the impact of unknown interference caused by coexisting wireless systems which operate on the same frequencies. Within this framework, capacity can be zero if pre-specified encoders and decoders are used. This necessitates the use of more sophisticated coordination schemes where the choice of encoders and decoders is additionally coordinated based on common randomness. As an application we study the <em>arbitrarily varying bidirectional broadcast channel </em>and derive the capacity regions for different coordination strategies. This problem is motivated by decode-and-forward bidirectional or two-way relaying, where a relay establishes a bidirectional communication between two other nodes while sharing the resources with other coexisting wireless networks.http://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/14/8/1357unknown interferencearbitrarily varying channelbidirectional relayingbidirectional broadcast channelinput and state constraintscapacity regioncoexisting networks
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Holger Boche
Rafael F. Wyrembelski
spellingShingle Holger Boche
Rafael F. Wyrembelski
Impact of Interference in Coexisting Wireless Networks with Applications to Arbitrarily Varying Bidirectional Broadcast Channels
Entropy
unknown interference
arbitrarily varying channel
bidirectional relaying
bidirectional broadcast channel
input and state constraints
capacity region
coexisting networks
author_facet Holger Boche
Rafael F. Wyrembelski
author_sort Holger Boche
title Impact of Interference in Coexisting Wireless Networks with Applications to Arbitrarily Varying Bidirectional Broadcast Channels
title_short Impact of Interference in Coexisting Wireless Networks with Applications to Arbitrarily Varying Bidirectional Broadcast Channels
title_full Impact of Interference in Coexisting Wireless Networks with Applications to Arbitrarily Varying Bidirectional Broadcast Channels
title_fullStr Impact of Interference in Coexisting Wireless Networks with Applications to Arbitrarily Varying Bidirectional Broadcast Channels
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Interference in Coexisting Wireless Networks with Applications to Arbitrarily Varying Bidirectional Broadcast Channels
title_sort impact of interference in coexisting wireless networks with applications to arbitrarily varying bidirectional broadcast channels
publisher MDPI AG
series Entropy
issn 1099-4300
publishDate 2012-08-01
description The paradigm shift from an exclusive allocation of frequency bands, one for each system, to a shared use of frequencies comes along with the need of new concepts since interference will be an ubiquitous phenomenon. In this paper, we use the concept of <em>arbitrarily varying channels</em> to model the impact of unknown interference caused by coexisting wireless systems which operate on the same frequencies. Within this framework, capacity can be zero if pre-specified encoders and decoders are used. This necessitates the use of more sophisticated coordination schemes where the choice of encoders and decoders is additionally coordinated based on common randomness. As an application we study the <em>arbitrarily varying bidirectional broadcast channel </em>and derive the capacity regions for different coordination strategies. This problem is motivated by decode-and-forward bidirectional or two-way relaying, where a relay establishes a bidirectional communication between two other nodes while sharing the resources with other coexisting wireless networks.
topic unknown interference
arbitrarily varying channel
bidirectional relaying
bidirectional broadcast channel
input and state constraints
capacity region
coexisting networks
url http://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/14/8/1357
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