CRC Press, 2009. — 485 p.
Adaptive techniques play a key role in modern wireless communication systems. The concept of adaptation is emphasized in the Adaptation in Wireless Communications Series across all layers of the wireless protocol stack, ranging from the physical layer to the application layer.
This book is devoted to adaptation in the physical layer. It gives a tutorial survey of adaptive signal processing techniques used in wireless and mobile communication systems. The topics include adaptive channel modeling and identification, adaptive receiver design and equalization, adaptive modulation and coding, adaptive multiple-input-multiple-output (MIMO) systems, adaptive and opportunistic beam forming, and cooperative diversity. Moreover, the book addresses other important aspects of adaptation in wireless communications, such as software defined radio, reconfigurable devices, and cognitive radio. The book is supported by various new analytical, experimental, and simulation results and is illustrated by more than 160 figures, 20 tables, and 800 references.
Adaptation Techniques and Enabling Parameter Estimation Algorithms for Wireless Communications Systems
Adaptive Channel Estimation in Wireless Communications
Adaptive Coded Modulation for Transmission over Fading Channels
MIMO Systems: Principles, Iterative Techniques, and Advanced Polarization
Adaptive Modeling and Identification of Nonlinear MIMO Channels Using Neural Networks
Joint Adaptive Transmission and Switched Diversity Reception
Adaptive Opportunistic Beamforming in Ricean Fading Channels
Adaptive Beamforming for Multiantenna Communications
Adaptive Equalization for Wireless Channels
Adaptive Multicarrier CDMA Space-Time Receivers
Cooperative Communications in Random Access Networks
Cooperative Diversity: Capacity Bounds and Code Designs
Time Synchronization for Wireless Sensor Networks
Adaptive Interference Nulling and Direction of Arrival Estimation in GPS Dual-Polarized Antenna Receiver
Reconfigurable Baseband Processing for Wireless Communications