Title :
Turbo greedy multiuser detection
Author :
AlRustamani, Amina A. ; Damnjanovic, Aleksandar D. ; Vojcic, Branimir R.
Author_Institution :
Dubai Internet City, United Arab Emirates
fDate :
8/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Previously, a novel scheme for iterative multiuser detection and turbo decoding was proposed by Damnjanovic and Vojcic (2000, 2001). In this scheme, multiuser detection and single-user turbo decoding are tightly coupled to maximize the overall gain. The extrinsic probabilities for the coded bits of the interfering users, obtained after each turbo decoding iteration, are used as a priori probabilities in the following multiuser iteration and the extrinsic information for the systematic bits of the desired user is used as a priori information in the next single-user turbo decoding iteration. Turbo decoding of parallel concatenated convolutional codes is carried out in parallel fashion. It has been shown that the proposed detector approaches the multiuser capacity limit within 1 dB in the low signal-to-noise ratio region. However, the main drawback of the scheme is its exponential complexity in the number of users, which is due to the complexity of the maximum a posteriori probability (MAP) multiuser detector. In this paper, we show that the complexity of the scheme can be significantly reduced by replacing the (MAP) multiuser detector with an iterative detector derived from the greedy multiuser detector proposed by AlRustamani and Vojcic (2000). In this paper, we demonstrate that, for both the additive white Gaussian noise and the frequency-nonselective Rayleigh fading, the substantial reduction in complexity of the iterative scheme proposed by Damnjanovic and Vojcic when the greedy detector is utilized introduces a slight degradation in performance
Keywords :
AWGN channels; channel coding; concatenated codes; convolutional codes; fading channels; iterative decoding; multi-access systems; multiuser channels; receivers; signal detection; turbo codes; additive white Gaussian noise; complexity; degradation; exponential complexity; frequency-nonselective Rayleigh fading; interfering users; iterative detector; iterative multiuser detection; iterative scheme; low signal-to-noise ratio region; multiuser capacity limit; multiuser detection; multiuser iteration; parallel concatenated convolutional codes; performance; single-user turbo decoding; turbo decoding; turbo decoding iteration; turbo greedy multiuser detection; Additive white noise; Concatenated codes; Convolutional codes; Degradation; Detectors; Frequency; Iterative decoding; Multiuser detection; Rayleigh channels; Signal to noise ratio;
Journal_Title :
Selected Areas in Communications, IEEE Journal on