A Blind Adaptive CDMA Receiver Based on State Space Structures
Zaid Albataineh, Fathi M. Salem

TL;DR
This paper introduces three novel blind adaptive CDMA receivers based on state space structures and ICA, which effectively mitigate multi-access interference without prior knowledge of propagation parameters.
Contribution
The paper proposes new blind and semi-blind adaptive CDMA receiver schemes utilizing state space models and ICA, outperforming conventional detectors in BER performance.
Findings
Proposed methods outperform traditional detectors in BER.
Blind detectors effectively mitigate multi-access interference.
Methods are robust across different user numbers and SNR levels.
Abstract
Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) is a channel access method, based on spread-spectrum technology, used by various radio technologies world-wide. In general, CDMA is used as an access method in many mobile standards such as CDMA2000 and WCDMA. We address the problem of blind multiuser equalization in the wideband CDMA system, in the noisy multipath propagation environment. Herein, we propose three new blind receiver schemes, which are based on state space structures and Independent Component Analysis (ICA). These blind state-space receivers (BSSR) do not require knowledge of the propagation parameters or spreading code sequences of the users they primarily exploit the natural assumption of statistical independence among the source signals. We also develop three semi blind adaptive detectors by incorporating the new adaptive methods into the standard RAKE receiver structure. Extensive…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlind Source Separation Techniques · Wireless Communication Networks Research · Advanced Adaptive Filtering Techniques
