Browsing by Author "Xu, Ping"
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Item Communication-Efficient Optimization and Learning for Distributed Multi-agent Systems(2022) Xu, Ping; Tian, Zhi ZTDistributed learning has attracted extensive interest in recent years, owing to the explosion of data generated from mobile sensors, social media services, and other networked multi-agent applications. In many of these applications, the observed data are usually kept private at local sites without being aggregated to a fusion center, either due to the prohibitively high cost of raw data transmission or privacy concerns. Meanwhile, each agent in the network only communicates with its neighbors within a one-hop local range to save transmission power. Moreover, distributed learning is typically implemented in an iterative manner for computational feasibility and efficiency. This incurs frequent communications among agents to exchange their locally computed updates of the shared learning model, which can cause tremendous communication overhead in terms of both link bandwidth and transmission power. Under this circumstance, this dissertation focuses on developing communication-efficient distributed learning algorithms for multi-agent systems under communication and privacy constraints. To be specific, we utilize the random feature (RF) mapping method to circumvent the curse of dimensionality issue in traditional kernel methods and bypass transmitting raw data in distributed kernel learning. This approach enables the reformulation of decentralized kernel learning as a decentralized consensus optimization problem in the RF space, whichis then solved distributedly and iteratively via the alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM), with a communication-censoring strategy incorporated to evaluate if an update is informative enough to be transmitted. For online streaming data with possibly unknown dynamics, this dissertation develops corresponding adaptive and dynamic decentralized learning approaches to learn the optimal function “on the fly” via linearized ADMM and conventional decentralized ADMM, respectively. Communication censoring and quantization strategies are utilized for both approaches to save communication resources. Finally, the present dissertation offers a unified framework of learning nonlinear input-output maps by bridging the gap in kernel methods and neural networks, which leads to the development of an RF-based deep kernel learning network with multiple learning paths.Item Receiver Design for Massive MIMO Wireless SystemsXu, Ping; Xu, Ping; Tian, ZhiMassive multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems that employ a large number of antennas at both receivers and transmitters have been widely considered for adoption in next generation (5G) wireless networks. The deployment of massive MIMO promises to enhance the received signal power for communications over millimeter-wave (mmWave) spectrum, which in turn increases the throughput and system efficiency. Notwithstanding the advantages of massive MIMO, several major technical challenges arise, which include the difficulty and complexity in hardware implementation, precoder design and channel estimation. In this thesis, we mainly focus on strategies that address the training overhead issue for mmWave massive MIMO channel estimation. By utilizing the sparsity feature in the angular domain of mmWave channels, we propose a gridless compressive sensing (CS) technique based on atomic norm minimization (ANM). Particularly for massive MIMO systems involving two-dimensional angle estimation, we develop a decoupled ANM (DANM) approach that offers high-accuracy channel estimation at low complexity and little training overhead. The proposed D-ANM approach is applied to mmWave massive MIMO systems with uniform rectangular array employed at base station and extended to the multiuser case. Investigation on the use of D-ANM for channel estimation in wideband mmWave SIMO-OFDM systems is also carried out to cope with frequency-selective channel fading.