English

Relay vs. User Cooperation in Time-Duplexed Multiaccess Networks

Information Theory 2016-11-17 v1 math.IT

Abstract

The performance of user-cooperation in a multi-access network is compared to that of using a wireless relay. Using the total transmit and processing power consumed at all nodes as a cost metric, the outage probabilities achieved by dynamic decode-and-forward (DDF) and amplify-and-forward (AF) are compared for the two networks. A geometry-inclusive high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) outage analysis in conjunction with area-averaged numerical simulations shows that user and relay cooperation achieve a maximum diversity of K and 2 respectively for a K-user multiaccess network under both DDF and AF. However, when accounting for energy costs of processing and communication, relay cooperation can be more energy efficient than user cooperation, i.e., relay cooperation achieves coding (SNR) gains, particularly in the low SNR regime, that override the diversity advantage of user cooperation.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0809.2226,
  title  = {Relay vs. User Cooperation in Time-Duplexed Multiaccess Networks},
  author = {Lalitha Sankar and Gerhard Kramer and Narayan B. Mandayam},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0809.2226},
  year   = {2016}
}

Comments

Submitted to the IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications, August 2008

R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:19:45.062Z