Cognitive Wyner Networks with Clustered Decoding

Abstract

We study an interference network where equally-numbered transmitters and receivers lie on two parallel lines, each transmitter opposite its intended receiver. We consider two short-range interference models: the "asymmetric network," where the signal sent by each transmitter is interfered only by the signal sent by its left neighbor (if present), and a "symmetric network," where it is interfered by both its left and its right neighbors. Each transmitter is cognizant of its own message, the messages of the t transmitters to its left, and the messages of the tr transmitters to its right. Each receiver decodes its message based on the signals received at its own antenna, at the r receive antennas to its left, and the rr receive antennas to its right. For such networks we provide upper and lower bounds on the multiplexing gain, i.e., on the high-SNR asymptotic logarithmic growth of the sum-rate capacity. In some cases our bounds meet, e.g., for the asymmetric network. Our results exhibit an equivalence between the transmitter side-information parameters t, tr and the receiver side-information parameters r, rr in the sense that increasing/decreasing t or tr by a positive integer δ has the same effect on the multiplexing gain as increasing/decreasing r or rr by δ. Moreover---even in asymmetric networks---there is an equivalence between the left side-information parameters t, r and the right side-information parameters tr, rr.

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