Jacques Demerjian

2papers

2 Papers

23.3ITApr 5
Would Learning Help? Adaptive CRC-QC-LDPC Selection for Integrity in 5G-NR V2X

Sarah Al-Shareeda, Gulcihan Özdemir, Arouj Fatima et al.

Vehicle-to-everything (V2X) communications impose stringent physical-layer integrity requirements, particularly under short-packet transmission and mobility-induced channel variation. This paper studies whether standard-compliant online selection of Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) polynomials and Quasi-Cyclic Low-Density Parity-Check (QC-LDPC) coding rates can reduce silent (undetected) errors in 5G New Radio (5G-NR) V2X links. The joint configuration problem is formulated as a lightweight Contextual Bandit (CB) with a small, discrete action space, and a discounted LinUCB policy is evaluated against greedy online adaptation and a conservative fixed baseline. A 5G-NR-compliant physical-layer simulation is developed using Sionna, modeling mobility through time-correlated Rayleigh fading, where vehicle speed governs channel correlation, and non-stationary interference via a two-state Markov process. The learning agent operates on coarse receiver feedback, including a noisy Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) estimate and indicators of burst interference and deep fades, and targets minimization of the Undetected Error Probability ((P{UE})) while accounting for the Detected Error Probability ((P{DE})). Overall, our objective is to delineate the mobility regimes in which learning-assisted CRC-QC-LDPC configuration improves physical-layer integrity in 5G-NR V2X systems. Our results indicate that learning-assisted adaptation is most effective at low to moderate mobility, reducing (P_UE) by up to 50-70% relative to greedy selection in the low-SNR regime ((-5) to 5~dB) and approaching the best fixed configuration at higher (E_b/N_0). At high mobility (>= 180~km/h), fast channel decorrelation weakens temporal predictability, limiting the effectiveness of online learning and reducing performance differences across policies.

CRJun 25, 2017
Lyapunov Exponent Evaluation of the CBC Mode of Operation

Abdessalem Abidi, Christophe Guyeux, Jacques Demerjian et al.

The Cipher Block Chaining (CBC) mode of encryption was invented in 1976, and it is currently one of the most commonly used mode. In our previous research works, we have proven that the CBC mode of operation exhibits, under some conditions, a chaotic behavior. The dynamics of this mode has been deeply investigated later, both qualitatively and quantitatively, using the rigorous mathematical topology field of research. In this article, which is an extension of our previous work, we intend to compute a new important quantitative property concerning our chaotic CBC mode of operation, which is the Lyapunov exponent.