Wenji Du

2papers

2 Papers

59.0NIMay 4
Choir: Tackling RTBC Performance Impossible Triangle with 5G Collaboration

Wenji Du, Wanghong Yang, Baosen Zhao et al.

Real-time broadband communication (RTBC) scenarios, such as cloud virtual reality and 8K live streaming, further raise the criteria of the performance triangle, requiring video bitrates exceeding 30 Mbps, tail delay below 50 ms, and fairness guarantees for multi-user concurrent access. Based on our testing and analysis, existing RTBC-oriented rate control solutions, including end-to-end algorithms and network-assisted algorithms, fail to simultaneously satisfy all performance metrics. The native dynamic delay and physical-layer resource allocation strategy inherent to the 5G radio access network (RAN) are the key reasons. These solutions lack adaptation to the 5G architecture, leading to reduced decision performance. This paper proposes Choir, an innovative collaborative solution mainly deployed on 5G base stations that deeply integrates 5G radio characteristics and video streaming traffic patterns to guide efficient sender-side rate control. Extensive simulation and testbed evaluations demonstrate Choir's significant performance in achieving high average bitrate, low tail delay, and inter-flow fairness across different 5G network scenarios.

CLOct 8, 2021
Explaining the Attention Mechanism of End-to-End Speech Recognition Using Decision Trees

Yuanchao Wang, Wenji Du, Chenghao Cai et al.

The attention mechanism has largely improved the performance of end-to-end speech recognition systems. However, the underlying behaviours of attention is not yet clearer. In this study, we use decision trees to explain how the attention mechanism impact itself in speech recognition. The results indicate that attention levels are largely impacted by their previous states rather than the encoder and decoder patterns. Additionally, the default attention mechanism seems to put more weights on closer states, but behaves poorly on modelling long-term dependencies of attention states.