Bit Density Based Signal and Jamming Detection in 1-Bit Quantized MIMO Systems
M. A. Teeti

TL;DR
This paper introduces a low-complexity detection method for identifying signals or jamming in 1-bit quantized MIMO systems using an adapted window comparator, demonstrating effective performance in wireless applications.
Contribution
It proposes a novel 1-bit detection approach based on binary sequence typical sets, reducing complexity and enabling effective detection in MIMO and sensor networks.
Findings
Detection performance is within 10% of unquantized systems in massive MIMO.
Performance gap decreases with longer sequences or increased jamming power.
Method is effective for non-stationary low-power transmitter probing.
Abstract
This paper studies the problem of deciding on the absence (i.e., null hypothesis, ) or presence (i.e., alternative hypothesis, ) of an unknown signal embedded in the received signal in a multiple-input, multiple-output (MIMO) receiver, employing 1-bit quantization. The originality of our solution lies in quantizing the received signal by an adapted 1-bit window comparator, rather than a traditional 1-bit quantizer. This enables us to divide the space of observed binary sequences into two typical sets (w.r.t. the distribution of the no. of 1's in a sequence) asymptotically, where the first set corresponds to and the second to . As a result, we reduce the detection problem to determining the highly probable set for an observed sequence. Thus, a very low-complexity binary hypothesis detector is proposed and its probability of…
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