Title :
Nonlinear techniques for the joint estimation of cochannel signals
Author :
Giridhar, K. ; Shynk, John J. ; Mathur, Amit ; Chari, Sujai ; Gooch, Richard P.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., California Univ., Santa Barbara, CA, USA
fDate :
4/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Cochannel interference occurs when two or more signals overlap in frequency and are present concurrently. Unlike in spread-spectrum multiple-access systems where the different users necessarily share the same channel, cochannel interference is a severe hindrance to frequency- and time-division multiple-access communications, and is typically minimized by interference rejection/suppression techniques. Rather than using interference suppression, we are interested in the joint estimation of the information-bearing narrow-band cochannel signals. Novel joint estimators are proposed that employ a single-input demodulator with oversampling to compensate for timing uncertainties. Assuming finite impulse-response channel characteristics, maximum likelihood (ML) and maximum a posteriori (MAP) criteria are used to derive cochannel detectors of varying complexities and degrees of performance. In particular, a (suboptimal) two-stage joint MAP symbol detector (JMAPSD) is introduced that has a lower complexity than the single-stage estimators while accruing only a marginal loss in error-rate performance at high signal-to-interference ratios. Assuming only reliable estimates of the primary and secondary signal powers, a blind adaptive JMAPSD algorithm for a priori unknown channels is also derived. The performance of these nonlinear joint estimation algorithms is studied through example computer simulations for two cochannel sources
Keywords :
adaptive estimation; cochannel interference; demodulation; frequency division multiple access; interference suppression; maximum likelihood detection; maximum likelihood estimation; signal sampling; time division multiple access; blind adaptive JMAPSD algorithm; cochannel detectors; cochannel interference; cochannel signal demodulation; cochannel sources; computer simulations; error rate performance; finite impulse-response channel characteristics; frequency-division multiple-access communications; high signal-to-interference ratios; information bearing narrowband cochannel signals; interference rejection/suppression; joint MAP symbol detector; maximum a posteriori criteria; maximum likelihood criteria; nonlinear joint estimation algorithms; nonlinear techniques; oversampling; single-input demodulator; time-division multiple-access communications; timing uncertainties; Demodulation; Detectors; Frequency; Interchannel interference; Interference suppression; Maximum likelihood detection; Multiple access interference; Narrowband; Spread spectrum communication; Timing;
Journal_Title :
Communications, IEEE Transactions on