Abanoub M. Girgis

LG
h-index7
4papers
23citations
Novelty55%
AI Score33

4 Papers

LGSep 16, 2024
Learning Latent Wireless Dynamics from Channel State Information

Charbel Bou Chaaya, Abanoub M. Girgis, Mehdi Bennis

In this work, we propose a novel data-driven machine learning (ML) technique to model and predict the dynamics of the wireless propagation environment in latent space. Leveraging the idea of channel charting, which learns compressed representations of high-dimensional channel state information (CSI), we incorporate a predictive component to capture the dynamics of the wireless system. Hence, we jointly learn a channel encoder that maps the estimated CSI to an appropriate latent space, and a predictor that models the relationships between such representations. Accordingly, our problem boils down to training a joint-embedding predictive architecture (JEPA) that simulates the latent dynamics of a wireless network from CSI. We present numerical evaluations on measured data and show that the proposed JEPA displays a two-fold increase in accuracy over benchmarks, for longer look-ahead prediction tasks.

LGJun 19, 2025
From Pixels to CSI: Distilling Latent Dynamics For Efficient Wireless Resource Management

Charbel Bou Chaaya, Abanoub M. Girgis, Mehdi Bennis

In this work, we aim to optimize the radio resource management of a communication system between a remote controller and its device, whose state is represented through image frames, without compromising the performance of the control task. We propose a novel machine learning (ML) technique to jointly model and predict the dynamics of the control system as well as the wireless propagation environment in latent space. Our method leverages two coupled joint-embedding predictive architectures (JEPAs): a control JEPA models the control dynamics and guides the predictions of a wireless JEPA, which captures the dynamics of the device's channel state information (CSI) through cross-modal conditioning. We then train a deep reinforcement learning (RL) algorithm to derive a control policy from latent control dynamics and a power predictor to estimate scheduling intervals with favorable channel conditions based on latent CSI representations. As such, the controller minimizes the usage of radio resources by utilizing the coupled JEPA networks to imagine the device's trajectory in latent space. We present simulation results on synthetic multimodal data and show that our proposed approach reduces transmit power by over 50% while maintaining control performance comparable to baseline methods that do not account for wireless optimization.

ITJun 7, 2024
Time-Series JEPA for Predictive Remote Control under Capacity-Limited Networks

Abanoub M. Girgis, Alvaro Valcarce, Mehdi Bennis

In remote control systems, transmitting large data volumes (e.g., images, video frames) from wireless sensors to remote controllers is challenging when uplink capacity is limited (e.g., RedCap devices or massive wireless sensor networks). Furthermore, controllers often need only information-rich representations of the original data. To address this, we propose a semantic-driven predictive control combined with a channel-aware scheduling to enhance control performance for multiple devices under limited network capacity. At its core, the proposed framework, coined Time-Series Joint Embedding Predictive Architecture (TS-JEPA), encodes high-dimensional sensory data into low-dimensional semantic embeddings at the sensor, reducing communication overhead. Furthermore, TS-JEPA enables predictive inference by predicting future embeddings from current ones and predicted commands, which are directly used by a semantic actor model to compute control commands within the embedding space, eliminating the need to reconstruct raw data. To further enhance reliability and communication efficiency, a channel-aware scheduling is integrated to dynamically prioritize device transmissions based on channel conditions and age of information (AoI). Simulations on inverted cart-pole systems show that the proposed framework significantly outperforms conventional control baselines in communication efficiency, control cost, and predictive accuracy. It enables robust and scalable control under limited network capacity compared to traditional scheduling schemes.

LGApr 16, 2021
Split Learning Meets Koopman Theory for Wireless Remote Monitoring and Prediction

Abanoub M. Girgis, Hyowoon Seo, Jihong Park et al.

Remote state monitoring over wireless is envisaged to play a pivotal role in enabling beyond 5G applications ranging from remote drone control to remote surgery. One key challenge is to identify the system dynamics that is non-linear with a large dimensional state. To obviate this issue, in this article we propose to train an autoencoder whose encoder and decoder are split and stored at a state sensor and its remote observer, respectively. This autoencoder not only decreases the remote monitoring payload size by reducing the state representation dimension, but also learns the system dynamics by lifting it via a Koopman operator, thereby allowing the observer to locally predict future states after training convergence. Numerical results under a non-linear cart-pole environment demonstrate that the proposed split learning of a Koopman autoencoder can locally predict future states, and the prediction accuracy increases with the representation dimension and transmission power.