ITIRLGApr 21, 2020

Robust Interference Management for SISO Systems with Multiple Over-the-Air Computations

arXiv:2004.09906v1
AI Analysis

This work addresses interference management for over-the-air computations in SISO systems, which is incremental for wireless communication and signal processing applications.

The paper tackles the problem of computing multiple sums simultaneously over a shared channel with minimal mean-squared error, focusing on designing optimal transmit-receive scaling policies to manage interference, and shows that at high SNR, the worst-case MSE converges to a non-zero value due to residual interference.

In this paper, we consider the over-the-air computation of sums. Specifically, we wish to compute $M\geq 2$ sums $s_m=\sum_{k\in\mathcal{D}m}x_k$ over a shared complex-valued MAC at once with minimal mean-squared error ($\mathsf{MSE}$). Finding appropriate Tx-Rx scaling factors balance between a low error in the computation of $s_n$ and the interference induced by it in the computation of other sums $s_m$, $m\neq n$. In this paper, we are interested in designing an optimal Tx-Rx scaling policy that minimizes the mean-squared error $\max_{m\in[1:M]}\mathsf{MSE}_m$ subject to a Tx power constraint with maximum power $P$. We show that an optimal design of the Tx-Rx scaling policy $\left(\bar{\mathbf{a}},\bar{\mathbf{b}}\right)$ involves optimizing (a) their phases and (b) their absolute values in order to (i) decompose the computation of $M$ sums into, respectively, $M_R$ and $M_I$ ($M=M_R+M_I$) calculations over real and imaginary part of the Rx signal and (ii) to minimize the computation over each part -- real and imaginary -- individually. The primary focus of this paper is on (b). We derive conditions (i) on the feasibility of the optimization problem and (ii) on the Tx-Rx scaling policy of a local minimum for $M_w=2$ computations over the real ($w=R$) or the imaginary ($w=I$) part. Extensive simulations over a single Rx chain for $M_w=2$ show that the level of interference in terms of $ΔD=|\mathcal{D}_2|-|\mathcal{D}_1|$ plays an important role on the ergodic worst-case $\mathsf{MSE}$. At very high $\mathsf{SNR}$, typically only the sensor with the weakest channel transmits with full power while all remaining sensors transmit with less to limit the interference. Interestingly, we observe that due to residual interference, the ergodic worst-case $\mathsf{MSE}$ is not vanishing; rather, it converges to $\frac{|\mathcal{D}_1||\mathcal{D}_2|}{K}$ as $\mathsf{SNR}\rightarrow\infty$.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes