LGITIVAug 7, 2023

Communication-Efficient Framework for Distributed Image Semantic Wireless Transmission

arXiv:2308.03713v229 citationsh-index: 98
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the need for efficient multi-task data transmission in IoT scenarios, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing semantic communication and federated learning concepts.

The paper tackles the problem of communication-efficient distributed image transmission for IoT devices by proposing a federated learning-based semantic communication framework, achieving about 10 dB peak signal-to-noise ratio gain in low signal-to-noise ratio conditions compared to traditional schemes.

Multi-node communication, which refers to the interaction among multiple devices, has attracted lots of attention in many Internet-of-Things (IoT) scenarios. However, its huge amounts of data flows and inflexibility for task extension have triggered the urgent requirement of communication-efficient distributed data transmission frameworks. In this paper, inspired by the great superiorities on bandwidth reduction and task adaptation of semantic communications, we propose a federated learning-based semantic communication (FLSC) framework for multi-task distributed image transmission with IoT devices. Federated learning enables the design of independent semantic communication link of each user while further improves the semantic extraction and task performance through global aggregation. Each link in FLSC is composed of a hierarchical vision transformer (HVT)-based extractor and a task-adaptive translator for coarse-to-fine semantic extraction and meaning translation according to specific tasks. In order to extend the FLSC into more realistic conditions, we design a channel state information-based multiple-input multiple-output transmission module to combat channel fading and noise. Simulation results show that the coarse semantic information can deal with a range of image-level tasks. Moreover, especially in low signal-to-noise ratio and channel bandwidth ratio regimes, FLSC evidently outperforms the traditional scheme, e.g. about 10 peak signal-to-noise ratio gain in the 3 dB channel condition.

Foundations

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

Your Notes