Modulation and Coding for NOMA and RSMA
Hamid Jafarkhani, Hossein Maleki, Mojtaba Vaezi

TL;DR
This paper reviews NOMA and RSMA, proposing interference-aware modulation techniques and deep autoencoders to improve decoding, reduce BER, and enhance throughput in next-generation multiple access systems.
Contribution
It introduces asynchronous transmission and interference-aware modulation methods that enable decoding without SIC, and explores deep autoencoders for end-to-end communication in NOMA.
Findings
Interference-aware modulation reduces bit error rates.
Deep autoencoders can improve BER in NOMA systems.
Proposed techniques enhance spectral efficiency and user throughput.
Abstract
Next-generation multiple access (NGMA) serves as an umbrella term for transmission schemes distinct from conventional orthogonal methods. A key candidate of NGMA, non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA), emerges as a solution to enhance connectivity by allowing multiple users to share time, frequency, and space concurrently. However, NOMA faces challenges in implementation, particularly in canceling inter-user interference. In this paper, we discuss the principles behind NOMA and review conventional NOMA methods. Then, to address these challenges, we present asynchronous transmission and interference-aware modulation techniques, enabling decoding without successive interference cancellation. The goal is to design constellations that dynamically adapt to interference, minimizing bit error rates (BERs) and enhancing user throughput in the presence of inter-user, inter-carrier, and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Wireless Communication Technologies · Satellite Communication Systems · Optical Wireless Communication Technologies
