Toward Reliable Semantic Communication: Beyond Average Performance

Abstract

Semantic communication has emerged as a promising paradigm for improving transmission efficiency by conveying task-relevant semantics rather than raw data. Although recent studies have achieved notable gains in communication efficiency and average task performance, reliability remains a fundamental bottleneck in dynamic and uncertain environments. In particular, most existing designs are still optimized mainly for average-case behavior, while lower-tail performance under adverse transmission conditions remains insufficiently understood and inadequately protected. In this article, we present a unified perspective on reliable semantic communication beyond average performance. We first review three reliability-oriented design categories: channel-aware adaptation, robustness-oriented codec design, and hybrid automatic repeat request (HARQ)-based retransmission. We show that these approaches address reliability from complementary perspectives, but each still has inherent limitations. Motivated by these observations, we discuss two solution directions: robust adaptive semantic communication under imperfect CSI, and joint source-channel-check coding with adaptive retransmission for sample-level reliability enhancement. Finally, we outline several future research directions, including the joint design of robustness and retransmission, reliability metrics beyond averages, and compatibility with existing digital wireless networks.

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