LGSPJun 27, 2021

Learning and Adaptation for Millimeter-Wave Beam Tracking and Training: a Dual Timescale Variational Framework

arXiv:2107.05466v328 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses beam management for vehicular networks, offering incremental improvements in efficiency and accuracy.

The paper tackles the high beam-training overhead in millimeter-wave vehicular networks by proposing a dual timescale learning and adaptation framework, which reduces the Kullback-Leibler divergence by 95% over baselines and improves spectral efficiency by 130% over exhaustive scanning and 20% over a state-of-the-art POMDP policy.

Millimeter-wave vehicular networks incur enormous beam-training overhead to enable narrow-beam communications. This paper proposes a learning and adaptation framework in which the dynamics of the communication beams are learned and then exploited to design adaptive beam-tracking and training with low overhead: on a long-timescale, a deep recurrent variational autoencoder (DR-VAE) uses noisy beam-training feedback to learn a probabilistic model of beam dynamics and enable predictive beam-tracking; on a short-timescale, an adaptive beam-training procedure is formulated as a partially observable (PO-) Markov decision process (MDP) and optimized via point-based value iteration (PBVI) by leveraging beam-training feedback and a probabilistic prediction of the strongest beam pair provided by the DR-VAE. In turn, beam-training feedback is used to refine the DR-VAE via stochastic gradient ascent in a continuous process of learning and adaptation. The proposed DR-VAE learning framework learns accurate beam dynamics: it reduces the Kullback-Leibler divergence between the ground truth and the learned model of beam dynamics by 95% over the Baum-Welch algorithm and a naive learning approach that neglects feedback errors. Numerical results on a line-of-sight (LOS) scenario with multipath reveal that the proposed dual timescale approach yields near-optimal spectral efficiency, and improves it by 130% over a policy that scans exhaustively over the dominant beam pairs, and by 20% over a state-of-the-art POMDP policy. Finally, a low-complexity policy is proposed by reducing the POMDP to an error-robust MDP, and is shown to perform well in regimes with infrequent feedback errors.

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