Pattern-Coupled Sparse Bayesian Learning for Recovery of Block-Sparse Signals
This addresses the challenge of signal recovery in applications like communications or imaging where block structures are unknown, representing an incremental improvement over prior sparse Bayesian learning methods.
The paper tackles the problem of recovering block-sparse signals with unknown cluster patterns by developing a new sparse Bayesian learning method that uses a pattern-coupled hierarchical Gaussian prior to model dependencies among coefficients, and numerical results show it outperforms existing methods.
We consider the problem of recovering block-sparse signals whose structures are unknown \emph{a priori}. Block-sparse signals with nonzero coefficients occurring in clusters arise naturally in many practical scenarios. However, the knowledge of the block structure is usually unavailable in practice. In this paper, we develop a new sparse Bayesian learning method for recovery of block-sparse signals with unknown cluster patterns. Specifically, a pattern-coupled hierarchical Gaussian prior model is introduced to characterize the statistical dependencies among coefficients, in which a set of hyperparameters are employed to control the sparsity of signal coefficients. Unlike the conventional sparse Bayesian learning framework in which each individual hyperparameter is associated independently with each coefficient, in this paper, the prior for each coefficient not only involves its own hyperparameter, but also the hyperparameters of its immediate neighbors. In doing this way, the sparsity patterns of neighboring coefficients are related to each other and the hierarchical model has the potential to encourage structured-sparse solutions. The hyperparameters, along with the sparse signal, are learned by maximizing their posterior probability via an expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm. Numerical results show that the proposed algorithm presents uniform superiority over other existing methods in a series of experiments.