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Self-Taught Waveform Synthesis and Analysis in the Amplify-and-Forward Relay Channel...

by Adam L Anderson, Steven R Young
Publication Type
Conference Paper
Book Title
2019 IEEE Cognitive Communications for Aerospace Applications Workshop
Publication Date
Page Numbers
1 to 4
Publisher Location
United States of America
Conference Name
Cognitive Communications for Aerospace Applications (CCAA) Workshop 2019​
Conference Location
Cleveland, Ohio, United States of America
Conference Sponsor
NASA & IEEE
Conference Date
-

Wireless communications plays a pivotal role in multiple complex domains such as tactical networks or space communications. Traditional physical (PHY) layer protocols for digital communications contain chains of signal processing blocks that have been mathematically optimized to transmit information bits efficiently over noisy channels. Unfortunately, the ongoing advancement of hardware and software design, and algorithm development, makes it difficult for some domains to keep up with the constant change in modern communication systems. It has been shown previously that combining deep learning with digital modulation (deepmod) allows a system to learn communications on its own rather than requiring human-invented protocols. This is particularly attractive to space communications where updating PHY layer technologies may be prohibitively complex or expensive. A link using deepmod is able to learn both waveform synthesis (transmit) and analysis (receive) that is self-taught. When deepmod is first initiated it has no knowledge of the channel medium but quickly learns to communicate by synthesizing waveforms that can be successfully decoded at the other end of the link. This is accomplished by a custom deep neural network especially suited for this particular task of learning. In this current work, we show that deepmod learns in both traditional point-to-point channels as well as the more abstract multi-hop amplify-and-forward relay channel. In the experimental results, even though no direct link between transmitter and receiver exists, deepmod-enabled nodes still create latent information bearing waveforms that can be used for communications.