88.9ITApr 21
Cramer-Rao Bounds for Activity Detection in Conventional and Fluid Antenna SystemsZhentian Zhang, Kai-Kit Wong, Hao Jiang et al.
In this letter, we develop a unified Cramér-Rao bound (CRB) framework to characterize the fundamental performance limits of transmission activity detection in fluid antenna systems (FASs) and conventional multiple fixed-position antenna (FPA) systems. To facilitate CRB analysis applicable to activity indicators, we relax the binary activity states to continuous parameters, thereby aligning the bound-based evaluation with practical threshold-based detection decisions. Closed-form CRB expressions are derived for two representative detection formulations, namely covariance-oriented and coherent models. Moreover, for single-antenna FASs, we obtain a closed-form coherent CRB by leveraging random matrix theory. The results demonstrate that CRB-based analysis provides a tractable and informative benchmark for evaluating activity detection across architectures and detection schemes, and further reveal that FASs can deliver strong spatial-diversity gains with significantly reduced complexity.
88.0SPMay 26
Geometry-Structured Channel Reconstruction for Conventional and Fluid Antenna Systems: Bayesian Inference and Fundamental LimitsZhentian Zhang, Kai-Kit Wong, Kaitao Meng et al.
Accurate channel state information (CSI) acquisition is critical for exploiting the spatial flexibility of fluid antenna systems (FASs). However, port selection and transmission optimization require CSI over a large number of candidate port positions, making direct port-wise estimation prohibitively costly in terms of pilot overhead. This paper addresses this challenge through geometry-structured channel reconstruction, which exploits the fact that the port-domain CSI can be parameterized by a small number of dominant propagation paths. We first establish fundamental mean square error (MSE) and normalized MSE (NMSE) benchmarks for both geometry-structured and unstructured channel reconstruction, providing analytical references for evaluating the intrinsic benefit of geometric modeling in conventional antenna systems and FASs. Motivated by the strong spatial correlation induced by densely distributed fluid antenna ports, we further propose a Bayesian reconstruction framework, termed geometry-structured expectation-maximization approximate message passing (GS-EM-AMP). The proposed algorithm incorporates geometric channel structure into the EM-AMP procedure and adaptively learns unknown statistical parameters from noisy observations. Numerical results demonstrate that GS-EM-AMP achieves near-bound reconstruction accuracy while maintaining strong robustness against steering-domain correlation, thereby offering an efficient and reliable solution for large-scale CSI acquisition in FASs.
83.9PFMar 31
Closed-Loop Integrated Sensing, Communication, and Control for Efficient Drone FlightJingli Li, Yiyan Ma, Bo Ai et al.
Low-altitude wireless networks (LAWN) require drones to follow specific trajectories controlled by ground base stations (GBSs). However, given complex low-altitude channel conditions and limited spectrum and power resources, sensing errors and wireless link unreliability cannot be ignored, leading to trajectory deviations that threaten flight safety. To address this issue, this paper proposes an integrated sensing-communication-control (ISCC) closed-loop trajectory tracking approach, aiming to reveal the coupling mechanisms among communication, sensing, and control during drone flight. In detail, we incorporate sensing errors in trajectory state estimation, packet losses in control command transmission, and finite blocklength transmission effects into the closed-loop dynamics. First, through theoretical analysis, we identify the dominant role of the time-frequency resources allocated to control in ensuring system stability and derive a lower bound on the resources required to guarantee stable operation. Second, to minimize tracking error, we formulate a time-frequency resource allocation optimization problem for the sensing, communication, and control components, subject to constraints on communication rate and closed-loop stability. Accordingly, a solution algorithm based on successive convex approximation is proposed. Third, simulation results indicate that once stability is ensured, system performance is primarily determined by sensing accuracy, with the trajectory tracking error exhibiting an approximately linear dependence on the position error bound. Finally, it is shown that the proposed ISCC scheme avoids trajectory divergence under FBL transmission compared with ISCC designs ignoring control packet loss, and could achieve decimeter-level average tracking accuracy, reducing the error to only 17.37% of that observed in the baseline global navigation satellite system scheme.
12.3SPMay 22
Communication Security and Sensing Privacy in FMCW-Based ISAC Through Signal ModulationMurat Temiz, Christos Masouros
This study proposes a novel radar-centric signaling design and architecture for secure integrated sensing and communication (ISAC) systems. The proposed framework is designed to provide robust physical layer security for data transmission while simultaneously enhancing sensing privacy. It employs index modulation and phase coding over frequency-modulated continuous-wave radar (FMCW) chirps, where index modulation (IM) provides an outer layer of data security, and we explicitly design the phase coding (PC) to perturb the resulting signal's ambiguity function (AF) to enhance sensing privacy. This design reduces the risk of unauthorized surveillance by rendering target velocity estimation practically infeasible for unauthorized passive sensing hardware (i.e., a sensing eavesdropper, S-Eve) and significantly impairing its range estimation capabilities. Furthermore, this study also presents the transmitter and receiver architectures required for effective modulation and demodulation of the proposed ISAC signaling and for performing sensing at the legitimate sensing hardware. Simulation results show that the proposed approach achieves high data throughput while enhancing communication security and sensing privacy.
79.4NIMar 21
A Unified Cloud-Edge-Terminal Framework for Multimodal Integrated Sensing and CommunicationYubo Peng, Luping Xiang, Kun Yang et al.
The transition to 6G calls for tightly integrated sensing and communication to support mission-critical services such as autonomous driving, embodied AI, and high-precision telemedicine. However, most existing ISAC designs rely on a single sensing modality (often RF), which limits environmental understanding and becomes a bottleneck in complex and dynamic scenes. This motivates a shift from single-modal to multimodal ISAC, where heterogeneous sensors (e.g., radar, LiDAR, and cameras) complement each other to improve robustness and semantic awareness. In this article, we first summarize key challenges for multimodal ISAC, including heterogeneous fusion, communication overhead, and scalable system design. We then highlight three enabling technologies: large AI models, semantic communications, and multi-agent systems, and discuss how their combination can enable task-oriented multimodal perception. Building on these insights, we propose a unified cloud-edge-terminal (CET) framework that hierarchically distributes intelligence and supports three adaptive operation modes: global fusion mode (GFM), cooperative relay mode (CRM), and peer interaction mode (PIM). A case study evaluates the framework across three modes, demonstrating that GFM achieves the highest accuracy, PIM minimizes latency, and CRM strikes an optimal balance between performance and efficiency. Finally, we conclude with open research issues and future directions.
97.8ITMay 14
CP-OFDM Achieves Lower Ranging CRB Than Frequency-Spread Waveforms in the Large-Sample RegimeFan Liu, Yifeng Xiong, Ya-Feng Liu et al.
The inherent randomness of communication symbols creates a fundamental tension in Integrated Sensing and Communications (ISAC). On the one hand, they enable data transmission while allowing sensing to fully reuse communication resources. On the other hand, their randomness induces waveform-dependent fluctuations that directly affect sensing accuracy. This paper investigates a foundational question arising from this tradeoff: \textit{How does the modulation waveform affect the ranging Cramér--Rao Bound (CRB) when sensing reuses random data symbols?} We address this question by revealing a structural factorization of the Fisher information matrix (FIM) for joint delay-amplitude estimation, which separates the deterministic Jacobian of the target geometry from the random frequency-domain signal power induced by the data symbols. This structure yields a Jensen-type universal lower bound on the CRB, which is exactly attained by CP-OFDM under PSK constellations. For QAM and broader sub-Gaussian constellations, we develop an asymptotic perturbation analysis of the inverse FIM and prove that, when the number of transmitted symbols $N$ grows large, CP-OFDM achieves a lower ranging CRB than any frequency-spread orthogonal waveform over the almost-sure event where the random FIM is invertible. This superiority is further extended to amplitude estimation and full joint delay-amplitude estimation. We also characterize the local geometry of the stochastic CRB minimization problem over the unitary group. The analysis reveals that CP-OFDM is a stationary point for finite $N$, and its Riemannian Hessian is positive semidefinite for sufficiently large $N$, establishing its asymptotic local optimality. Numerical results confirm that OFDM outperforms representative waveforms including SC, OTFS, and AFDM.
SPAug 23, 2025
Deep Learning-based Techniques for Integrated Sensing and Communication Systems: State-of-the-Art, Challenges, and OpportunitiesMurat Temiz, Yongwei Zhang, Yanwei Fu et al.
This article comprehensively reviews recent developments and research on deep learning-based (DL-based) techniques for integrated sensing and communication (ISAC) systems. ISAC, which combines sensing and communication functionalities, is regarded as a key enabler for 6G and beyond networks, as many emerging applications, such as vehicular networks and industrial robotics, necessitate both sensing and communication capabilities for effective operation. A unified platform that provides both functions can reduce hardware complexity, alleviate frequency spectrum congestion, and improve energy efficiency. However, integrating these functionalities on the same hardware requires highly optimized signal processing and system design, introducing significant computational complexity when relying on conventional iterative or optimization-based techniques. As an alternative to conventional techniques, DL-based techniques offer efficient and near-optimal solutions with reduced computational complexity. Hence, such techniques are well-suited for operating under limited computational resources and low latency requirements in real-time systems. DL-based techniques can swiftly and effectively yield near-optimal solutions for a wide range of sophisticated ISAC-related tasks, including waveform design, channel estimation, sensing signal processing, data demodulation, and interference mitigation. Therefore, motivated by these advantages, recent studies have proposed various DL-based approaches for ISAC system design. After briefly introducing DL architectures and ISAC fundamentals, this survey presents a comprehensive and categorized review of state-of-the-art DL-based techniques for ISAC, highlights their key advantages and major challenges, and outlines potential directions for future research.
85.7ITApr 1
Finite-blocklength Fluid Antenna SystemsZhentian Zhang, Kai-Kit Wong, David Morales-Jimenez et al.
This paper investigates fluid antenna systems (FASs) subject to finite-blocklength (FBL) constraints, motivated by the strict reliability-latency and ultra-massive connectivity requirements of future wireless networks. While FAS performance has been widely studied in the asymptotic regime, its behavior under FBL remains largely unexplored. Our objective is to develop a unified set of analytical tools for evaluating FASs under FBL that remains applicable across different spatial-correlation models. First, to establish accurate benchmarks for non-orthogonal finite-length user signature design, we characterize both the average and the worst-case correlation coefficients via extreme value theory (EVT) and derive closed-form predictions of the achievable correlation levels. Second, taking block error rate (BLER) as the fundamental FBL metric, we study joint detection and decoding in FAS-assisted links and derive a closed-form BLER expression that is universally applicable across channel models. Additionally, we revisit outage probability (OP) in the FBL regime and obtain tractable OP characterizations for both FASs and conventional multiple fixed-position antenna (FPA) systems. In order to reduce the computational burden for multi-fold integrals in correlated fading models, we further propose a Taylor-expansion-assisted mean value theorem for integrals (MVTI), thus enabling efficient performance evaluation with marginal accuracy loss. Numerical results validate the analysis and reveal that even single-antenna FASs can have superior spatial diversity relative to conventional multi-FPA systems. Moreover, under both FBL and interference-limited environments, FASs provide improved energy, spectral, and hardware efficiencies, hence highlighting FAS as a promising enabler for next-generation wireless networks.
SPDec 13, 2025
A Sensing Dataset Protocol for Benchmarking and Multi-Task Wireless SensingJiawei Huang, Di Zhang, Yuanhao Cui et al.
Wireless sensing has become a fundamental enabler for intelligent environments, supporting applications such as human detection, activity recognition, localization, and vital sign monitoring. Despite rapid advances, existing datasets and pipelines remain fragmented across sensing modalities, hindering fair comparison, transfer, and reproducibility. We propose the Sensing Dataset Protocol (SDP), a protocol-level specification and benchmark framework for large-scale wireless sensing. SDP defines how heterogeneous wireless signals are mapped into a unified perception data-block schema through lightweight synchronization, frequency-time alignment, and resampling, while a Canonical Polyadic-Alternating Least Squares (CP-ALS) pooling stage provides a task-agnostic representation that preserves multipath, spectral, and temporal structures. Built upon this protocol, a unified benchmark is established for detection, recognition, and vital-sign estimation with consistent preprocessing, training, and evaluation. Experiments under the cross-user split demonstrate that SDP significantly reduces variance (approximately 88%) across seeds while maintaining competitive accuracy and latency, confirming its value as a reproducible foundation for multi-modal and multitask sensing research.
OPTICSOct 15, 2025
Optical Computation-in-Communication enables low-latency, high-fidelity perception in telesurgeryRui Yang, Jiaming Hu, Jian-Qing Zheng et al.
Artificial intelligence (AI) holds significant promise for enhancing intraoperative perception and decision-making in telesurgery, where physical separation impairs sensory feedback and control. Despite advances in medical AI and surgical robotics, conventional electronic AI architectures remain fundamentally constrained by the compounded latency from serial processing of inference and communication. This limitation is especially critical in latency-sensitive procedures such as endovascular interventions, where delays over 200 ms can compromise real-time AI reliability and patient safety. Here, we introduce an Optical Computation-in-Communication (OCiC) framework that reduces end-to-end latency significantly by performing AI inference concurrently with optical communication. OCiC integrates Optical Remote Computing Units (ORCUs) directly into the optical communication pathway, with each ORCU experimentally achieving up to 69 tera-operations per second per channel through spectrally efficient two-dimensional photonic convolution. The system maintains ultrahigh inference fidelity within 0.1% of CPU/GPU baselines on classification and coronary angiography segmentation, while intrinsically mitigating cumulative error propagation, a longstanding barrier to deep optical network scalability. We validated the robustness of OCiC through outdoor dark fibre deployments, confirming consistent and stable performance across varying environmental conditions. When scaled globally, OCiC transforms long-haul fibre infrastructure into a distributed photonic AI fabric with exascale potential, enabling reliable, low-latency telesurgery across distances up to 10,000 km and opening a new optical frontier for distributed medical intelligence.
SPSep 12, 2019
Complexity-Scalable Neural Network Based MIMO Detection With Learnable Weight ScalingAbdullahi Mohammad, Christos Masouros, Yiannis Andreopoulos
This paper introduces a framework for systematic complexity scaling of deep neural network(DNN) based MIMO detectors. The model uses a fraction of the DNN inputs by scaling their values through weights that follow monotonically non-increasing functions. This allows for weight scaling across and within the different DNN layers in order to achieve accuracy-vs.-complexity scalability during inference. In order to further improve the performance of our proposal, we introduce a sparsity-inducing regularization constraint in conjunction with trainable weight-scaling functions. In this way, the network learns to balance detection accuracy versus complexity while also increasing robustness to changes in the activation patterns, leading to further improvement in the detection accuracy and BER performance at the same inference complexity. Numerical results show that our approach is 10-foldand 100-fold less complex than classical approaches based on semi-definite relaxation and ML detection, respectively.
ITSep 7, 2017
Secure Full-Duplex Device-to-Device CommunicationMuhammad R. A. Khandaker, Christos Masouros, Kai-Kit Wong
This paper considers full-duplex (FD) device-to-device (D2D) communications in a downlink MISO cellular system in the presence of multiple eavesdroppers. The D2D pair communicate sharing the same frequency band allocated to the cellular users (CUs). Since the D2D users share the same frequency as the CUs, both the base station (BS) and D2D transmissions interfere each other. In addition, due to limited processing capability, D2D users are susceptible to external attacks. Our aim is to design optimal beamforming and power control mechanism to guarantee secure communication while delivering the required quality-of-service (QoS) for the D2D link. In order to improve security, artificial noise (AN) is transmitted by the BS. We design robust beamforming for secure message as well as the AN in the worst-case sense for minimizing total transmit power with imperfect channel state information (CSI) of all links available at the BS. The problem is strictly non-convex with infinitely many constraints. By discovering the hidden convexity of the problem, we derive a rank-one optimal solution for the power minimization problem.