Rate-Splitting Multiple Access for Coexistence of Semantic and Bit Communications
Yuanwen Liu, Bruno Clerckx

TL;DR
This paper explores resource allocation strategies for coexistence of semantic and bit communications in 6G networks, demonstrating that rate-splitting multiple access (RSMA) outperforms other schemes in various regimes.
Contribution
It introduces and analyzes RSMA for coexistence of semantic and bit communications, showing its advantages over NOMA and OMA in this context.
Findings
RSMA outperforms NOMA in rate regions.
RSMA has better performance in high semantic rate regimes.
Time sharing enhances RSMA rate region in coexistence scenarios.
Abstract
In the sixth generation (6G) of cellular networks, the demands for capacity and connectivity will increase dramatically to meet the requirements of emerging services for both humans and machines. Semantic communication has shown great potential because of its efficiency, and suitability for users who only care about the semantic meaning. But bit communication is still needed for users requiring original messages. Therefore, there will be a coexistence of semantic and bit communications in future networks. This motivates us to explore how to allocate resources in such a coexistence scenario. We investigate different uplink multiple access (MA) schemes for the coexistence of semantic users and a bit user, namely orthogonal multiple access (OMA), non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) and rate-splitting multiple access (RSMA). We characterize the rate regions achieved by those MA schemes.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlind Source Separation Techniques · Molecular Communication and Nanonetworks · EEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces
