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  4. A Reconstruction-Computation-Quantization (RCQ) Approach to Node Operations in LDPC Decoding
 
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A Reconstruction-Computation-Quantization (RCQ) Approach to Node Operations in LDPC Decoding

Publikationstyp
Conference Paper
Date Issued
2020
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Wang, Linfang  
Wesel, Richard D.  
Stark, Maximilian  orcid-logo
Bauch, Gerhard  
Institut
Nachrichtentechnik E-8  
TORE-URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11420/8975
Citation
IEEE Global Communications Conference (GLOBECOM 2020)
Contribution to Conference
IEEE Global Communications Conference, GLOBECOM 2020  
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85100909145
This paper proposes a finite-precision decoding method for low-density parity-check (LDPC) codes that features the three steps of Reconstruction, Computation, and Quantization (RCQ). Unlike Mutual-Information-Maximization Quantized Belief Propagation (MIM-QBP), RCQ can approximate either belief propagation or Min-Sum decoding. MIM-QBP decoders do not work well when the fraction of degree-2 variable nodes is large. However, sometimes a large fraction of degree-2 variable nodes is used to facilitate a fast encoding structure, as seen in the IEEE 802.11 standard and the DVB-S2 standard. In contrast to MIM-QBP, the proposed RCQ decoder may be applied to any off-the-shelf LDPC code, including those with a large fraction of degree-2 variable nodes. Simulations show that a 4-bit Min-Sum RCQ decoder delivers frame error rate (FER) performance within 0.1 dB of floating point belief propagation (BP) for the IEEE 802.11 standard LDPC code in the low SNR region. The RCQ decoder actually outperforms floating point BP and Min-Sum in the high SNR region were FER less than 10-5. This paper also introduces Hierarchical Dynamic Quantization (HDQ) to design the time-varying non-uniform quantizers required by RCQ decoders. HDQ is a low-complexity design technique that is slightly sub-optimal. Simulation results comparing HDQ and optimal quantization on the symmetric binary-input memoryless additive white Gaussian noise channel show a mutual information loss of less than 10-6 bits, which is negligible in practice.
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