Citation:
52nd Annual Conference on Information Sciences and Systems (CISS 2018), 21-23 March 2018, Princeton, New Jersey, USA. [Proceedings], 6 pag.
ISBN:
978-1-5386-0579-0
Sponsor:
A. Lancho and T. Koch have received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement number 714161), from the Spanish Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad under Grants TEC2013-41718-R, RYC-2014-16332 and TEC2016-78434-C3-3-R (AEI/FEDER, EU), from an FPU fellowship from the Spanish Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte under Grant FPU14/01274, and from the Comunidad de Madrid under Grant S2103/ICE-2845. G. Durisi has been supported by the Swedish Research Council under Grant and 2016-03293.
Project:
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/H2020/714161 Gobierno de España. TEC2013-41718-R Gobierno de España. RYC-2014-16332 Gobierno de España. TEC2016-78434-C3-3-R (AEI/FEDER, EU) Gobierno de España. FPU14/01274 Comunidad de Madrid. S2103/ICE-2845
Keywords:
Fading channels
,
Encoding
,
Coherence
,
Signal to noise ratio
,
Receivers
,
Dispersion
,
Wireless communication
Capacity and outage capacity characterize the maximum coding rate at which reliable communication is feasible when there are no constraints on the packet length. Evaluated for fading channels, they are important performance benchmarks for wireless communicatioCapacity and outage capacity characterize the maximum coding rate at which reliable communication is feasible when there are no constraints on the packet length. Evaluated for fading channels, they are important performance benchmarks for wireless communication systems. However, the latency of a communication system is proportional to the length of the packets it exchanges, so assuming that there are no constraints on the packet length may be overly optimistic for communication systems with stringent latency constraints. Recently, there has been great interest within the information theory community in characterizing the maximum coding rate for short packet lengths. Research on this topic is often concerned with asymptotic expansions of the coding rate with respect to the packet length, which then give rise to normal approximations. In this paper, we review existing normal approximations for single-antenna Rayleigh block-fading channels and compare them with the high-SNR normal approximation we presented at the 2017 IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory (Lancho, Koch, and Durisi, 2017). We further discuss how these normal approx- imations may help to assess the performance of communication protocols.[+][-]
Description:
Proceeding of: 52nd Annual Conference on Information Sciences and Systems (CISS 2018)