Abstract

We consider two-receiver broadcast channels where each receiver may know a priori some of the messages requested by the other receiver as receiver message side information (RMSI). We devise a general approach to leverage RMSI in these channels. To this end, we first propose a pre-coding scheme considering the general message setup where each receiver requests both common and private messages and knows a priori part of the private message requested by the other receiver as RMSI. We then construct the transmission scheme of a two-receiver channel with RMSI by applying the proposed pre-coding scheme to the best transmission scheme for the channel without RMSI. To demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach, we apply our pre-coding scheme to three categories of the two-receiver discrete memoryless broadcast channel: (i) channel without state; (ii) channel with states known causally to the transmitter; and (iii) channel with states known non-causally to the transmitter. We then derive a unified inner bound for all three categories. We show that our inner bound is tight for some new cases in each of the three categories, as well as all cases whose capacity region was known previously.

Highlights

  • Communication over wireless channels motivates the study of broadcast channels [1]

  • We first derive a general outer bound for the discrete memoryless broadcast channel with receiver message side information (RMSI), without state, stated as Theorem 3

  • Nair-El Gamal outer bound for the discrete memoryless broadcast channel without RMSI, without state [25]

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Summary

Introduction

Communication over wireless channels motivates the study of broadcast channels [1]. In these channels, a transmitter wishes to send a number of messages to multiple receivers via a noisy shared medium, which can be time-varying due to, for example, fading or interference. The messages to be sent by the transmitter may already be present in parts at some of the receivers, referred to as receiver message side information (RMSI). This form of side information appears in multimedia broadcasting with packet loss. After a few rounds of transmissions, each receiver may a priori know some of the packets re-demanded (due to packet loss) by other receivers

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