Compressive Coded Modulation for Seamless Rate Adaptation

  • Hao Cui ,
  • ,
  • Jun Wu ,
  • Chang Wen Chen ,
  • Feng Wu

IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications | , Vol 12(10): pp. 4892-4904

This paper presents a novel compressive coded modulation (CCM) which simultaneously achieves joint source-channel coding and seamless rate adaptation. The embedding of source compression into modulation brings significant throughput gain when the physical layer data contain non-negligible redundancy. The kernel of CCM is a new random projection (RP) code inspired by the compressive sensing (CS) theory. The RP code generates multilevel symbols from source binaries through weighted sum operations. Then, the generated RP symbols are mapped into a dense constellation for transmission. The receiver performs joint decoding based on received symbols. As the number of RP symbols can be adjusted in fine granularity, the rate adaptation becomes seamless. Two key design issues in the proposed CCM are addressed in this paper. First, we consider the RP code design for sources with different redundancies. Three principles are established and a concrete implementation is given. Second, we devise a linear-time decoding algorithm for the proposed RP code. In this belief propagation (BP) algorithm, we find that computing convolution in time domain is more efficient than that in frequency domain for binary variable nodes. Moreover, we invent a ZigZag deconvolution to further reduce the complexity. Analysis show that the proposed decoding algorithm is nearly 20 times faster than the state-of-the-art BP algorithm for CS called CS-BP. Emulations on traced data show that CCM achieves significant throughput gain, up to 33% and 70%, respectively, over the Hybrid ARQ with compression and BICM with compression, under practical time-varying wireless channels.