Victor Croisfelt

IT
h-index75
4papers
53citations
Novelty44%
AI Score35

4 Papers

LGNov 14, 2023
Batch Selection and Communication for Active Learning with Edge Labeling

Victor Croisfelt, Shashi Raj Pandey, Osvaldo Simeone et al.

Conventional retransmission (ARQ) protocols are designed with the goal of ensuring the correct reception of all the individual transmitter's packets at the receiver. When the transmitter is a learner communicating with a teacher, this goal is at odds with the actual aim of the learner, which is that of eliciting the most relevant label information from the teacher. Taking an active learning perspective, this paper addresses the following key protocol design questions: (i) Active batch selection: Which batch of inputs should be sent to the teacher to acquire the most useful information and thus reduce the number of required communication rounds? (ii) Batch encoding: Can batches of data points be combined to reduce the communication resources required at each communication round? Specifically, this work introduces Communication-Constrained Bayesian Active Knowledge Distillation (CC-BAKD), a novel protocol that integrates Bayesian active learning with compression via a linear mix-up mechanism. Comparisons with existing active learning protocols demonstrate the advantages of the proposed approach.

LGNov 20, 2025
Real-Time Inference for Distributed Multimodal Systems under Communication Delay Uncertainty

Victor Croisfelt, João Henrique Inacio de Souza, Shashi Raj Pandey et al.

Connected cyber-physical systems perform inference based on real-time inputs from multiple data streams. Uncertain communication delays across data streams challenge the temporal flow of the inference process. State-of-the-art (SotA) non-blocking inference methods rely on a reference-modality paradigm, requiring one modality input to be fully received before processing, while depending on costly offline profiling. We propose a novel, neuro-inspired non-blocking inference paradigm that primarily employs adaptive temporal windows of integration (TWIs) to dynamically adjust to stochastic delay patterns across heterogeneous streams while relaxing the reference-modality requirement. Our communication-delay-aware framework achieves robust real-time inference with finer-grained control over the accuracy-latency tradeoff. Experiments on the audio-visual event localization (AVEL) task demonstrate superior adaptability to network dynamics compared to SotA approaches.

ITOct 30, 2023
On the Impact of Control Signaling in RIS-Empowered Wireless Communications

Fabio Saggese, Victor Croisfelt, Radosław Kotaba et al.

The research on Reconfigurable Intelligent Surfaces (RISs) has dominantly been focused on physical-layer aspects and analyses of the achievable adaptation of the wireless propagation environment. Compared to that, questions related to system-level integration of RISs have received less attention. We address this research gap by analyzing the necessary control/signaling operations that are necessary to integrate RIS as a new type of wireless infrastructure element. We build a general model for evaluating the impact of control operations along two dimensions: i) the allocated bandwidth of the control channels (in-band and out-of-band), and ii) the rate selection for the data channel (multiplexing or diversity). Specifically, the second dimension results in two generic transmission schemes, one based on channel estimation and the subsequent optimization of the RIS, while the other is based on sweeping through predefined RIS phase configurations. We analyze the communication performance in multiple setups built along these two dimensions. While necessarily simplified, our analysis reveals the basic trade-offs in RIS-assisted communication and the associated control operations. The main contribution of the paper is a methodology for systematic evaluation of the control overhead in RIS-aided networks, regardless of the specific control schemes used.

ITMar 15, 2022
A Random Access Protocol for RIS-Aided Wireless Communications

Victor Croisfelt, Fabio Saggese, Israel Leyva-Mayorga et al.

Reconfigurable intelligent surfaces (RISs) are arrays of passive elements that can control the reflection of the incident electromagnetic waves. While RIS are particularly useful to avoid blockages, the protocol aspects for their implementation have been largely overlooked. In this paper, we devise a random access protocol for a RIS-assisted wireless communication setting. Rather than tailoring RIS reflections to meet the positions of users equipment (UEs), our protocol relies on a finite set of RIS configurations designed to cover the area of interest. The protocol is comprised of a downlink training phase followed by an uplink access phase. During these phases, a base station (BS) controls the RIS to sweep over its configurations. The UEs then receive training signals to measure the channel quality with the different RIS configurations and refine their access policies. Numerical results show that our protocol increases the average number of successful access attempts; however, at the expense of increased access delay due to the realization of a training period. Promising results are further observed in scenarios with a high access load.