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Every communication system has a receiver and a transmitter. Irrespective if it is wired or wireless.The future of wireless communication consists of a massive number of transmitters and receivers. The question arises, can we use computer vision to help wireless communication? To satisfy the high data requirement, a large number

Every communication system has a receiver and a transmitter. Irrespective if it is wired or wireless.The future of wireless communication consists of a massive number of transmitters and receivers. The question arises, can we use computer vision to help wireless communication? To satisfy the high data requirement, a large number of antennas are required. The devices that employ large-antenna arrays have other sensors such as RGB camera, depth camera, or LiDAR sensors.These vision sensors help us overcome the non-trivial wireless communication challenges, such as beam blockage prediction and hand-over prediction.This is further motivated by the recent advances in deep learning and computer vision that can extract high-level semantics from complex visual scenes, and the increasing interest of leveraging machine/deep learning tools in wireless communication problems.[1] <br/><br/>The research was focused solely based on technology like 3D cameras,object detection and object tracking using Computer vision and compression techniques. The main objective of using computer vision was to make Milli-meter Wave communication more robust, and to collect more data for the machine learning algorithms. Pre-build lossless and lossy compression algorithms, such as FFMPEG, were used in the research. An algorithm was developed that could use 3D cameras and machine learning models such as YOLOV3, to track moving objects using servo motors and low powered computers like the raspberry pi or the Jetson Nano. In other words, the receiver could track the highly mobile transmitter in 1 dimension using a 3D camera. Not only that, during the research, the transmitter was loaded on a DJI M600 pro drone, and then machine learning and object tracking was used to track the highly mobile drone. In order to build this machine learning model and object tracker, collecting data like depth, RGB images and position coordinates were the first yet the most important step. GPS coordinates from the DJI M600 were also pulled and were successfully plotted on google earth. This proved to be very useful during data collection using a drone and for the future applications of position estimation for a drone using machine learning. <br/><br/>Initially, images were taken from transmitter camera every second,and those frames were then converted to a text file containing hex-decimal values. Each text file was then transmitted from the transmitter to receiver, and on the receiver side, a python code converted the hex-decimal to JPG. This would give an efect of real time video transmission. However, towards the end of the research, an industry standard, real time video was streamed using pre-built FFMPEG modules, GNU radio and Universal Software Radio Peripheral (USRP). The transmitter camera was a PI-camera. More details will be discussed as we further dive deep into this research report.

ContributorsSeth, Madhav (Author) / Alkhateeb, Ahmed (Thesis director) / Alrabeiah, Muhammad (Committee member) / Electrical Engineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2021-05
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Description
Recent years have seen machine learning makes growing presence in several areas inwireless communications, and specifically in large-scale Multiple-Input Multiple-Output (MIMO) systems. This comes as a result of its ability to offer innovative solutions to some of the most daunting problems that haunt current and future large-scale MIMO systems, such as downlink channel-training

Recent years have seen machine learning makes growing presence in several areas inwireless communications, and specifically in large-scale Multiple-Input Multiple-Output (MIMO) systems. This comes as a result of its ability to offer innovative solutions to some of the most daunting problems that haunt current and future large-scale MIMO systems, such as downlink channel-training and sensitivity to line-of-sight (LOS) blockages to name two examples. Machine learning, in general, provides wireless systems with data-driven capabilities, with which they could realize much needed agility for decision-making and adaptability to their surroundings. Bearing the potential of machine learning in mind, this dissertation takes a close look at what deep learning can bring to the table of large-scale MIMO systems. It proposes three novel frameworks based on deep learning that tackle challenges rooted in the need to acquire channel state information. Framework 1, namely deterministic channel prediction, recognizes that some channels are easier to acquire than others (e.g., uplink are easier to acquire than downlink), and, as such, it learns a function that predicts some channels (target channels) from others (observed channels). Framework 2, namely statistical channel prediction, aims to do the same thing as Framework 1, but it takes a more statistical approach; it learns a large-scale statistic for target channels (i.e., per-user channel covariance) from observed channels. Differently from frameworks 1 and 2, framework 3, namely vision-aided wireless communications, presents an unorthodox perspective on dealing with large-scale MIMO challenges specific to high-frequency communications. It relies on the fact that high-frequency communications are reliant on LOS much like computer vision. Therefore, it recognizes that parallel and utilizes multimodal deep learning to address LOS-related challenges, such as downlink beam training and LOSlink blockages. All three frameworks are studied and discussed using datasets representing various large-scale MIMO settings. Overall, they show promising results that cement the value of machine learning, especially deep learning, to large-scale MIMO systems.
ContributorsAlrabeiah, Muhammad (Author) / Alkhateeb, Ahmed A (Thesis advisor) / Turaga, Pavan P (Committee member) / Dasarathy, Gautam G (Committee member) / Tepedelenlioglu, Cihan C (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021