Home | About Us | Projects | People | Documents | Courses | Internal
 
Document Details: Compressive Oversampling for Robust Data...
TITLE
 

Compressive Oversampling for Robust Data Transmission in Sensor Networks

In Under submission , 9 pages , July 2009.

NESL Technical Report #: TR-UCLA-NESL-200907-04

ABSTRACT
 

Data loss in wireless sensing applications is inevitable and while there have been many attempts at coping with this issue, recent developments in the area of Compressive Sensing (CS) provide a new and attractive perspective. Since many physical signals of interest are known to be sparse or compressible, employing CS, not only compresses the data and reduces effective transmission rate, but also improves the robustness of the system to channel erasures. This is possible because reconstruction algorithms for compressively sampled signals are not hampered by the stochastic nature of wireless link disturbances, which has traditionally plagued attempts at proactively handling the effects of these errors. In this paper, we propose that if CS is employed for source compression, then CS can further be exploited as an application layer erasure coding strategy for recovering missing data. We show that CS erasure encoding (CSEC) with random sampling is robust for handling missing data in erasure channels, paralleling the performance of BCH codes, with the added benefit of graceful degradation of the reconstruction error even when the amount of missing data far exceeds the designed redundancy. Further, since CSEC is equivalent to nominal oversampling in the incoherent measurement basis, it is computationally cheaper than conventional erasure coding. We support our proposal through extensive performance studies.

AUTHORS
 

Zainul M Charbiwala
Supriyo Chakraborty
Sadaf Zahedi
Younghun Kim
Mani B Srivastava
Chatschik Bisdikian
Ting He


DOWNLOADS
 

Sorry, this document is not yet publicly available. Please contact the authors.

RELATED PROJECTS
 

JellyFish : Title TBD
Prudent Sampling : Prudent Sampling for Cyber-Physical Systems

TYPE
 

Report

© 2009 by Networked & Embedded Systems LaboratoryUniversity of California, Los Angeles
(Developed using Ruby on Rails, hosted on Mac OS X, and best viewed without Internet Explorer!)
Maintained by Mani Srivastava