Shichuan Chen

SP
3papers
327citations
Novelty40%
AI Score23

3 Papers

SPOct 28, 2020
SigNet: A Novel Deep Learning Framework for Radio Signal Classification

Zhuangzhi Chen, Hui Cui, Jingyang Xiang et al.

Deep learning methods achieve great success in many areas due to their powerful feature extraction capabilities and end-to-end training mechanism, and recently they are also introduced for radio signal modulation classification. In this paper, we propose a novel deep learning framework called SigNet, where a signal-to-matrix (S2M) operator is adopted to convert the original signal into a square matrix first and is co-trained with a follow-up CNN architecture for classification. This model is further accelerated by integrating 1D convolution operators, leading to the upgraded model SigNet2.0. The simulations on two signal datasets show that both SigNet and SigNet2.0 outperform a number of well-known baselines. More interestingly, our proposed models behave extremely well in small-sample learning when only a small training dataset is provided. They can achieve a relatively high accuracy even when 1\% training data are kept, while other baseline models may lose their effectiveness much more quickly as the datasets get smaller. Such result suggests that SigNet/SigNet2.0 could be extremely useful in the situations where labeled signal data are difficult to obtain. The visualization of the output features of our models demonstrates that our model can well divide different modulation types of signals in the feature hyper-space.

SPSep 13, 2019
Spectrum Sensing Based on Deep Learning Classification for Cognitive Radios

Shilian Zheng, Shichuan Chen, Peihan Qi et al.

Spectrum sensing is a key technology for cognitive radios. We present spectrum sensing as a classification problem and propose a sensing method based on deep learning classification. We normalize the received signal power to overcome the effects of noise power uncertainty. We train the model with as many types of signals as possible as well as noise data to enable the trained network model to adapt to untrained new signals. We also use transfer learning strategies to improve the performance for real-world signals. Extensive experiments are conducted to evaluate the performance of this method. The simulation results show that the proposed method performs better than two traditional spectrum sensing methods, i.e., maximum-minimum eigenvalue ratio-based method and frequency domain entropy-based method. In addition, the experimental results of the new untrained signal types show that our method can adapt to the detection of these new signals. Furthermore, the real-world signal detection experiment results show that the detection performance can be further improved by transfer learning. Finally, experiments under colored noise show that our proposed method has superior detection performance under colored noise, while the traditional methods have a significant performance degradation, which further validate the superiority of our method.

LGApr 20, 2019
Deep Learning for Large-Scale Real-World ACARS and ADS-B Radio Signal Classification

Shichuan Chen, Shilian Zheng, Lifeng Yang et al.

Radio signal classification has a very wide range of applications in the field of wireless communications and electromagnetic spectrum management. In recent years, deep learning has been used to solve the problem of radio signal classification and has achieved good results. However, the radio signal data currently used is very limited in scale. In order to verify the performance of the deep learning-based radio signal classification on real-world radio signal data, in this paper we conduct experiments on large-scale real-world ACARS and ADS-B signal data with sample sizes of 900,000 and 13,000,000, respectively, and with categories of 3,143 and 5,157 respectively. We use the same Inception-Residual neural network model structure for ACARS signal classification and ADS-B signal classification to verify the ability of a single basic deep neural network model structure to process different types of radio signals, i.e., communication bursts in ACARS and pulse bursts in ADS-B. We build an experimental system for radio signal deep learning experiments. Experimental results show that the signal classification accuracy of ACARS and ADS-B is 98.1% and 96.3%, respectively. When the signal-to-noise ratio (with injected additive white Gaussian noise) is greater than 9 dB, the classification accuracy is greater than 92%. These experimental results validate the ability of deep learning to classify large-scale real-world radio signals. The results of the transfer learning experiment show that the model trained on large-scale ADS-B datasets is more conducive to the learning and training of new tasks than the model trained on small-scale datasets.