SPNov 17, 2022
Learning to Communicate with Intent: An IntroductionMiguel Angel Gutierrez-Estevez, Yiqun Wu, Chan Zhou
We propose a novel framework to learn how to communicate with intent, i.e., to transmit messages over a wireless communication channel based on the end-goal of the communication. This stays in stark contrast to classical communication systems where the objective is to reproduce at the receiver side either exactly or approximately the message sent by the transmitter, regardless of the end-goal. Our procedure is general enough that can be adapted to any type of goal or task, so long as the said task is a (almost-everywhere) differentiable function over which gradients can be propagated. We focus on supervised learning and reinforcement learning (RL) tasks, and propose algorithms to learn the communication system and the task jointly in an end-to-end manner. We then delve deeper into the transmission of images and propose two systems, one for the classification of images and a second one to play an Atari game based on RL. The performance is compared with a joint source and channel coding (JSCC) communication system designed to minimize the reconstruction error of messages at the receiver side, and results show overall great improvement. Further, for the RL task, we show that while a JSCC strategy is not better than a random action selection strategy even at high SNRs, with our approach we get close to the upper bound even for low SNRs.
SYJan 9, 2013
Stability and Cost Optimization in Controlled Random Walks Using Scheduling FieldsGerhard Wunder, Chan Zhou, Martin Kasparick
The control of large queueing networks is a notoriously difficult problem. Recently, an interesting new policy design framework for the control problem called h-MaxWeight has been proposed: h-MaxWeight is a natural generalization of the famous MaxWeight policy where instead of the quadratic any other surrogate value function can be applied. Stability of the policy is then achieved through a perturbation technique. However, stability crucially depends on parameter choice which has to be adapted in simulations. In this paper we use a different technique where the required perturbations can be directly implemented in the weight domain, which we call a scheduling field then. Specifically, we derive the theoretical arsenal that guarantees universal stability while still operating close to the underlying cost criterion. Simulation examples suggest that the new approach to policy synthesis can even provide significantly higher gains irrespective of any further assumptions on the network model or parameter choice.
ITJul 11, 2021
QoS Prediction for 5G Connected and Automated DrivingApostolos Kousaridas, Ramya Panthangi Manjunath, Jose Mauricio Perdomo et al.
5G communication system can support the demanding quality-of-service (QoS) requirements of many advanced vehicle-to-everything (V2X) use cases. However, the safe and efficient driving, especially of automated vehicles, may be affected by sudden changes of the provided QoS. For that reason, the prediction of the QoS changes and the early notification of these predicted changes to the vehicles have been recently enabled by 5G communication systems. This solution enables the vehicles to avoid or mitigate the effect of sudden QoS changes at the application level. This article describes how QoS prediction could be generated by a 5G communication system and delivered to a V2X application. The tele-operated driving use case is used as an example to analyze the feasibility of a QoS prediction scheme. Useful recommendations for the development of a QoS prediction solution are provided, while open research topics are identified.