ITLGSPJan 13, 2021

Random Fourier Feature Based Deep Learning for Wireless Communications

arXiv:2101.05254v120 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the need for validated deep learning methods in next-generation wireless communication systems, offering incremental improvements with practical applications.

The paper tackles the lack of rigorous justification for random Fourier feature (RFF) based deep learning in wireless communications by providing analytical proofs that RFF architectures have lower approximation error and misclassification probability compared to classical DL, and proposes a distribution-dependent RFF for low training complexity, with simulations showing significant performance gains in low-data regimes for tasks like LOS/NLOS classification and LDPC code detection.

Deep-learning (DL) has emerged as a powerful machine-learning technique for several classic problems encountered in generic wireless communications. Specifically, random Fourier Features (RFF) based deep-learning has emerged as an attractive solution for several machine-learning problems; yet there is a lacuna of rigorous results to justify the viability of RFF based DL-algorithms in general. To address this gap, we attempt to analytically quantify the viability of RFF based DL. Precisely, in this paper, analytical proofs are presented demonstrating that RFF based DL architectures have lower approximation-error and probability of misclassification as compared to classical DL architectures. In addition, a new distribution-dependent RFF is proposed to facilitate DL architectures with low training-complexity. Through computer simulations, the practical application of the presented analytical results and the proposed distribution-dependent RFF, are depicted for various machine-learning problems encountered in next-generation communication systems such as: a) line of sight (LOS)/non-line of sight (NLOS) classification, and b) message-passing based detection of low-density parity check codes (LDPC) codes over nonlinear visible light communication (VLC) channels. Especially in the low training-data regime, the presented simulations show that significant performance gains are achieved when utilizing RFF maps of observations. Lastly, in all the presented simulations, it is observed that the proposed distribution-dependent RFFs significantly outperform RFFs, which make them useful for potential machine-learning/DL based applications in the context of next-generation communication systems.

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