Coding and Decoding for the Dynamic Decode and Forward Relay Protocol
K. Raj Kumar, Giuseppe Caire

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the finite block length performance of the Dynamic Decode and Forward relay protocol, proposing new decoding strategies and code constructions to improve reliability without extra overhead.
Contribution
It characterizes the finite block length DMT for DDF, introduces a relay decision rejection criterion, and demonstrates near-optimal decoding with MMSE-GDFE lattice decoding.
Findings
Relay decoding error significantly impacts performance.
Optimal DMT achieved without CRC or extra overhead.
MMSE-GDFE lattice decoding offers near-optimal results.
Abstract
We study the Dynamic Decode and Forward (DDF) protocol for a single half-duplex relay, single-antenna channel with quasi-static fading. The DDF protocol is well-known and has been analyzed in terms of the Diversity-Multiplexing Tradeoff (DMT) in the infinite block length limit. We characterize the finite block length DMT and give new explicit code constructions. The finite block length analysis illuminates a few key aspects that have been neglected in the previous literature: 1) we show that one dominating cause of degradation with respect to the infinite block length regime is the event of decoding error at the relay; 2) we explicitly take into account the fact that the destination does not generally know a priori the relay decision time at which the relay switches from listening to transmit mode. Both the above problems can be tackled by a careful design of the decoding algorithm. In…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCooperative Communication and Network Coding · Full-Duplex Wireless Communications · Advanced Wireless Communication Techniques
