Code diversity in multiple antenna wireless communication
Yiyue Wu, Robert Calderbank

TL;DR
This paper explores code diversity in multiple antenna wireless communication, using feedback to select from code families to enhance performance and reduce decoding complexity, demonstrated with circulant codes and comparisons to existing codes.
Contribution
It introduces a family of full rate circulant codes that can be linearly decoded and outperform traditional codes like Alamouti at the same rate.
Findings
Circulant codes outperform Alamouti at the same rate.
Feedback-based code selection improves decoding performance.
Circulant codes enable linear decoding via Fourier decomposition.
Abstract
The standard approach to the design of individual space-time codes is based on optimizing diversity and coding gains. This geometric approach leads to remarkable examples, such as perfect space-time block codes, for which the complexity of Maximum Likelihood (ML) decoding is considerable. Code diversity is an alternative and complementary approach where a small number of feedback bits are used to select from a family of space-time codes. Different codes lead to different induced channels at the receiver, where Channel State Information (CSI) is used to instruct the transmitter how to choose the code. This method of feedback provides gains associated with beamforming while minimizing the number of feedback bits. It complements the standard approach to code design by taking advantage of different (possibly equivalent) realizations of a particular code design. Feedback can be combined with…
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