Sebastian Dörner

IT
5papers
899citations
Novelty50%
AI Score30

5 Papers

ITFeb 17, 2023
Deep Reinforcement Learning for mmWave Initial Beam Alignment

Daniel Tandler, Sebastian Dörner, Marc Gauger et al.

We investigate the applicability of deep reinforcement learning algorithms to the adaptive initial access beam alignment problem for mmWave communications using the state-of-the-art proximal policy optimization algorithm as an example. In comparison to recent unsupervised learning based approaches developed to tackle this problem, deep reinforcement learning has the potential to address a new and wider range of applications, since, in principle, no (differentiable) model of the channel and/or the whole system is required for training, and only agent-environment interactions are necessary to learn an algorithm (be it online or using a recorded dataset). We show that, although the chosen off-the-shelf deep reinforcement learning agent fails to perform well when trained on realistic problem sizes, introducing action space shaping in the form of beamforming modules vastly improves the performance, without sacrificing much generalizability. Using this add-on, the agent is able to deliver competitive performance to various state-of-the-art methods on simulated environments, even under realistic problem sizes. This demonstrates that through well-directed modification, deep reinforcement learning may have a chance to compete with other approaches in this area, opening up many straightforward extensions to other/similar scenarios.

MLJul 11, 2017Code
Deep Learning-Based Communication Over the Air

Sebastian Dörner, Sebastian Cammerer, Jakob Hoydis et al.

End-to-end learning of communications systems is a fascinating novel concept that has so far only been validated by simulations for block-based transmissions. It allows learning of transmitter and receiver implementations as deep neural networks (NNs) that are optimized for an arbitrary differentiable end-to-end performance metric, e.g., block error rate (BLER). In this paper, we demonstrate that over-the-air transmissions are possible: We build, train, and run a complete communications system solely composed of NNs using unsynchronized off-the-shelf software-defined radios (SDRs) and open-source deep learning (DL) software libraries. We extend the existing ideas towards continuous data transmission which eases their current restriction to short block lengths but also entails the issue of receiver synchronization. We overcome this problem by introducing a frame synchronization module based on another NN. A comparison of the BLER performance of the "learned" system with that of a practical baseline shows competitive performance close to 1 dB, even without extensive hyperparameter tuning. We identify several practical challenges of training such a system over actual channels, in particular the missing channel gradient, and propose a two-step learning procedure based on the idea of transfer learning that circumvents this issue.

SPMay 28, 2019
Towards Practical Indoor Positioning Based on Massive MIMO Systems

Mark Widmaier, Maximilian Arnold, Sebastian Dörner et al.

We showcase the practicability of an indoor positioning system (IPS) solely based on Neural Networks (NNs) and the channel state information (CSI) of a (Massive) multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) communication system, i.e., only build on the basis of data that is already existent in today's systems. As such our IPS system promises both, a good accuracy without the need of any additional protocol/signaling overhead for the user localization task. In particular, we propose a tailored NN structure with an additional phase branch as feature extractor and (compared to previous results) a significantly reduced amount of trainable parameters, leading to a minimization of the amount of required training data. We provide actual measurements for indoor scenarios with up to 64 antennas covering a large area of 80m2. In the second part, several robustness investigations for real-measurements are conducted, i.e., once trained, we analyze the recall accuracy over a time-period of several days. Further, we analyze the impact of pedestrians walking in-between the measurements and show that finetuning and pre-training of the NN helps to mitigate effects of hardware drifts and alterations in the propagation environment over time. This reduces the amount of required training samples at equal precision and, thereby, decreases the effort of the costly training data acquisition

ITMay 24, 2019
On Recurrent Neural Networks for Sequence-based Processing in Communications

Daniel Tandler, Sebastian Dörner, Sebastian Cammerer et al.

In this work, we analyze the capabilities and practical limitations of neural networks (NNs) for sequence-based signal processing which can be seen as an omnipresent property in almost any modern communication systems. In particular, we train multiple state-of-the-art recurrent neural network (RNN) structures to learn how to decode convolutional codes allowing a clear benchmarking with the corresponding maximum likelihood (ML) Viterbi decoder. We examine the decoding performance for various kinds of NN architectures, beginning with classical types like feedforward layers and gated recurrent unit (GRU)-layers, up to more recently introduced architectures such as temporal convolutional networks (TCNs) and differentiable neural computers (DNCs) with external memory. As a key limitation, it turns out that the training complexity increases exponentially with the length of the encoding memory $ν$ and, thus, practically limits the achievable bit error rate (BER) performance. To overcome this limitation, we introduce a new training-method by gradually increasing the number of ones within the training sequences, i.e., we constrain the amount of possible training sequences in the beginning until first convergence. By consecutively adding more and more possible sequences to the training set, we finally achieve training success in cases that did not converge before via naive training. Further, we show that our network can learn to jointly detect and decode a quadrature phase shift keying (QPSK) modulated code with sub-optimal (anti-Gray) labeling in one-shot at a performance that would require iterations between demapper and decoder in classic detection schemes.

ITJan 8, 2019
Enabling FDD Massive MIMO through Deep Learning-based Channel Prediction

Maximilian Arnold, Sebastian Dörner, Sebastian Cammerer et al.

A major obstacle for widespread deployment of frequency division duplex (FDD)-based Massive multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) communications is the large signaling overhead for reporting full downlink (DL) channel state information (CSI) back to the basestation (BS), in order to enable closed-loop precoding. We completely remove this overhead by a deep-learning based channel extrapolation (or "prediction") approach and demonstrate that a neural network (NN) at the BS can infer the DL CSI centered around a frequency $f_\text{DL}$ by solely observing uplink (UL) CSI on a different, yet adjacent frequency band around $f_\text{UL}$; no more pilot/reporting overhead is needed than with a genuine time division duplex (TDD)-based system. The rationale is that scatterers and the large-scale propagation environment are sufficiently similar to allow a NN to learn about the physical connections and constraints between two neighboring frequency bands, and thus provide a well-operating system even when classic extrapolation methods, like the Wiener filter (used as a baseline for comparison throughout) fails. We study its performance for various state-of-the-art Massive MIMO channel models, and, even more so, evaluate the scheme using actual Massive MIMO channel measurements, rendering it to be practically feasible at negligible loss in spectral efficiency when compared to a genuine TDD-based system.