Search for dissertations about: "polar codes"

Found 4 swedish dissertations containing the words polar codes.

  1. 1. Coding Strategies for Compress-and-Forward Relaying

    Author : Ricardo Blasco-Serrano; Mikael Skoglund; Ragnar Thobaben; Joerg Kliewer; KTH; []
    Keywords : TEKNIK OCH TEKNOLOGIER; ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY; Telecommunication theory; Telekommunikationsteori;

    Abstract : The deployment of large communication networks with many autonomous devices has opened new possibilities for transmission. In particular cooperation among the different nodes has been identified as an enabling technology to satisfy the increasing demand of resources. READ MORE

  2. 2. Coding and Transmission Strategies for Secrecy

    Author : Mattias Andersson; Mikael Skoglund; Matthieu Bloch; KTH; []
    Keywords : TEKNIK OCH TEKNOLOGIER; ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY; Electrical Engineering; Elektro- och systemteknik;

    Abstract : In this thesis we consider several problems relating to information theoretic security. The wiretap channel is the simplest information theoretic setting which takes security into account, and in the first chapters of the thesis we design some practical coding schemes for this channel model. READ MORE

  3. 3. Coding for the Wiretap Channel

    Author : Mattias Andersson; Mikael Skoglund; Michael Lentmaier; KTH; []
    Keywords : TEKNIK OCH TEKNOLOGIER; ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY; Telecommunication; Telekommunikation;

    Abstract : We consider code design for Wyner’s wiretap channel. Optimal coding schemes for this channel require an overall code that is capacity achieving for the main channel, partitioned into smaller subcodes, all of which are capacity achieving for the wiretapper’s channel. READ MORE

  4. 4. On Compression and Coordination in Networks

    Author : Ricardo Blasco-Serrano; Mikael Skoglund; Ragnar Thobaben; Luc Vandendorpe; KTH; []
    Keywords : TEKNIK OCH TEKNOLOGIER; ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY;

    Abstract : The current trends in communications suggest that the transfer of information between machines will soon predominate over the traditional human-oriented exchange. The new applications in machine-to-machine communications demand for a new type of networks that are much larger and, especially, much denser. READ MORE