Optimality of Treating Interference as Noise: A Combinatorial Perspective
Xinping Yi, Giuseppe Caire

TL;DR
This paper reformulates the TIN problem in interference channels as an assignment problem, simplifies the GDoF region expression, establishes new TIN optimality conditions, and proposes an improved distributed link scheduling scheme with better throughput and energy efficiency.
Contribution
It introduces a combinatorial perspective to TIN, simplifies the GDoF region analysis, and develops a new low-complexity, energy-efficient link scheduling algorithm for D2D networks.
Findings
Polynomial-time algorithms find optimal power control.
Simplified GDoF region expression using maximum weighted matchings.
Significant throughput and energy efficiency improvements with ITLinQ+.
Abstract
For single-antenna Gaussian interference channels, we re-formulate the problem of determining the Generalized Degrees of Freedom (GDoF) region achievable by treating interference as Gaussian noise (TIN) derived in [3] from a combinatorial perspective. We show that the TIN power control problem can be cast into an assignment problem, such that the globally optimal power allocation variables can be obtained by well-known polynomial time algorithms. Furthermore, the expression of the TIN-Achievable GDoF region (TINA region) can be substantially simplified with the aid of maximum weighted matchings. We also provide conditions under which the TINA region is a convex polytope that relax those in [3]. For these new conditions, together with a channel connectivity (i.e., interference topology) condition, we show TIN optimality for a new class of interference networks that is not included, nor…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEnergy Harvesting in Wireless Networks · Advanced MIMO Systems Optimization · Cooperative Communication and Network Coding
