Unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) communication is of crucial importance for diverse practical applications. However, it is susceptible to the severe spectrum scarcity problem and interference since it operates in the unlicensed spectrum band. In order to tackle those issues, a dynamic spectrum sharing network is considered with the anti-jamming technique. Moreover, an intelligent spectrum allocation and trajectory optimization scheme is proposed to adapt to diverse jamming models by exploiting our designed novel online-offline multi-agent actor-critic and deep deterministic policy-gradient framework. Simulation results demonstrate the high efficiency of our proposed framework. It is also shown that our proposed scheme achieves the largest transmission rate among all benchmark schemes.
This paper is concerned with the issue of improving video subscribers' quality of experience (QoE) by deploying a multi-unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) network. Different from existing works, we characterize subscribers' QoE by video bitrates, latency, and frame freezing and propose to improve their QoE by energy-efficiently and dynamically optimizing the multi-UAV network in terms of serving UAV selection, UAV trajectory, and UAV transmit power. The dynamic multi-UAV network optimization problem is formulated as a challenging sequential-decision problem with the goal of maximizing subscribers' QoE while minimizing the total network power consumption, subject to some physical resource constraints. We propose a novel network optimization algorithm to solve this challenging problem, in which a Lyapunov technique is first explored to decompose the sequential-decision problem into several repeatedly optimized sub-problems to avoid the curse of dimensionality. To solve the sub-problems, iterative and approximate optimization mechanisms with provable performance guarantees are then developed. Finally, we design extensive simulations to verify the effectiveness of the proposed algorithm. Simulation results show that the proposed algorithm can effectively improve the QoE of subscribers and is 66.75\% more energy-efficient than benchmarks.
Federated edge learning is envisioned as the bedrock of enabling intelligence in next-generation wireless networks, but the limited spectral resources often constrain its scalability. In light of this challenge, a line of recent research suggested integrating analog over-the-air computations into federated edge learning systems, to exploit the superposition property of electromagnetic waves for fast aggregation of intermediate parameters and achieve (almost) unlimited scalability. Over-the-air computations also benefit the system in other aspects, such as low hardware cost, reduced access latency, and enhanced privacy protection. Despite these advantages, the interference introduced by wireless communications also influences various aspects of the model training process, while its importance is not well recognized yet. This article provides a comprehensive overview of the positive and negative effects of interference on over-the-air computation-based edge learning systems. The potential open issues and research trends are also discussed.
End-to-end semantic communications (ESC) rely on deep neural networks (DNN) to boost communication efficiency by only transmitting the semantics of data, showing great potential for high-demand mobile applications. We argue that central to the success of ESC is the robust interpretation of conveyed semantics at the receiver side, especially for security-critical applications such as automatic driving and smart healthcare. However, robustifying semantic interpretation is challenging as ESC is extremely vulnerable to physical-layer adversarial attacks due to the openness of wireless channels and the fragileness of neural models. Toward ESC robustness in practice, we ask the following two questions: Q1: For attacks, is it possible to generate semantic-oriented physical-layer adversarial attacks that are imperceptible, input-agnostic and controllable? Q2: Can we develop a defense strategy against such semantic distortions and previously proposed adversaries? To this end, we first present MobileSC, a novel semantic communication framework that considers the computation and memory efficiency in wireless environments. Equipped with this framework, we propose SemAdv, a physical-layer adversarial perturbation generator that aims to craft semantic adversaries over the air with the abovementioned criteria, thus answering the Q1. To better characterize the realworld effects for robust training and evaluation, we further introduce a novel adversarial training method SemMixed to harden the ESC against SemAdv attacks and existing strong threats, thus answering the Q2. Extensive experiments on three public benchmarks verify the effectiveness of our proposed methods against various physical adversarial attacks. We also show some interesting findings, e.g., our MobileSC can even be more robust than classical block-wise communication systems in the low SNR regime.
In this paper, we develop a deep learning (DL)-guided hybrid beam and power allocation approach for multiuser millimeter-wave (mmWave) networks, which facilitates swift beamforming at the base station (BS). The following persisting challenges motivated our research: (i) User and vehicular mobility, as well as redundant beam-reselections in mmWave networks, degrade the efficiency; (ii) Due to the large beamforming dimension at the BS, the beamforming weights predicted by the cutting-edge DL-based methods often do not suit the channel distributions; (iii) Co-located user devices may cause a severe beam conflict, thus deteriorating system performance. To address the aforementioned challenges, we exploit the synergy of supervised learning and super-resolution technology to enable low-overhead beam- and power allocation. In the first step, we propose a method for beam-quality prediction. It is based on deep learning and explores the relationship between high- and low-resolution beam images (energy). Afterward, we develop a DL-based allocation approach, which enables high-accuracy beam and power allocation with only a portion of the available time-sequential low-resolution images. Theoretical and numerical results verify the effectiveness of our proposed
The integration of a near-space information network (NSIN) with the reconfigurable intelligent surface (RIS) is envisioned to significantly enhance the communication performance of future wireless communication systems by proactively altering wireless channels. This paper investigates the problem of deploying a RIS-integrated NSIN to provide energy-efficient, ultra-reliable and low-latency communications (URLLC) services. We mathematically formulate this problem as a resource optimization problem, aiming to maximize the effective throughput and minimize the system power consumption, subject to URLLC and physical resource constraints. The formulated problem is challenging in terms of accurate channel estimation, RIS phase alignment, theoretical analysis, and effective solution. We propose a joint resource allocation algorithm to handle these challenges. In this algorithm, we develop an accurate channel estimation approach by exploring message passing and optimize phase shifts of RIS reflecting elements to further increase the channel gain. Besides, we derive an analysis-friend expression of decoding error probability and decompose the problem into two-layered optimization problems by analyzing the monotonicity, which makes the formulated problem analytically tractable. Extensive simulations have been conducted to verify the performance of the proposed algorithm. Simulation results show that the proposed algorithm can achieve outstanding channel estimation performance and is more energy-efficient than diverse benchmark algorithms.
This paper proposes a client selection (CS) method to tackle the communication bottleneck of federated learning (FL) while concurrently coping with FL's data heterogeneity issue. Specifically, we first analyze the effect of CS in FL and show that FL training can be accelerated by adequately choosing participants to diversify the training dataset in each round of training. Based on this, we leverage data profiling and determinantal point process (DPP) sampling techniques to develop an algorithm termed Federated Learning with DPP-based Participant Selection (FL-DP$^3$S). This algorithm effectively diversifies the participants' datasets in each round of training while preserving their data privacy. We conduct extensive experiments to examine the efficacy of our proposed method. The results show that our scheme attains a faster convergence rate, as well as a smaller communication overhead than several baselines.
Federated Learning (FL) can be used in mobile edge networks to train machine learning models in a distributed manner. Recently, FL has been interpreted within a Model-Agnostic Meta-Learning (MAML) framework, which brings FL significant advantages in fast adaptation and convergence over heterogeneous datasets. However, existing research simply combines MAML and FL without explicitly addressing how much benefit MAML brings to FL and how to maximize such benefit over mobile edge networks. In this paper, we quantify the benefit from two aspects: optimizing FL hyperparameters (i.e., sampled data size and the number of communication rounds) and resource allocation (i.e., transmit power) in mobile edge networks. Specifically, we formulate the MAML-based FL design as an overall learning time minimization problem, under the constraints of model accuracy and energy consumption. Facilitated by the convergence analysis of MAML-based FL, we decompose the formulated problem and then solve it using analytical solutions and the coordinate descent method. With the obtained FL hyperparameters and resource allocation, we design a MAML-based FL algorithm, called Automated Federated Learning (AutoFL), that is able to conduct fast adaptation and convergence. Extensive experimental results verify that AutoFL outperforms other benchmark algorithms regarding the learning time and convergence performance.