학술논문

Joint Sparsity Pattern Recovery With 1-b Compressive Sensing in Distributed Sensor Networks
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Signal and Information Processing over Networks IEEE Trans. on Signal and Inf. Process. over Networks Signal and Information Processing over Networks, IEEE Transactions on. 5(1):15-30 Mar, 2019
Subject
Signal Processing and Analysis
Computing and Processing
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Signal to noise ratio
Indexes
Measurement uncertainty
Information processing
Compressed sensing
Decoding
Iterative algorithms
Compressive sensing
distributed sensor networks
quantization
common sparsity pattern recovery
binary iterative hard thresholding
Language
ISSN
2373-776X
2373-7778
Abstract
In this paper, we study the problem of joint sparse support recovery with 1-b quantized compressive measurements in a distributed sensor network. Multiple nodes in the network are assumed to observe sparse signals having the same but unknown sparse support. Each node quantizes its measurement vector element-wise to 1 b. First, we consider that all the quantized measurements are available at a central fusion center. We derive performance bounds for sparsity pattern recovery using 1-bit quantized measurements from multiple sensors when the maximum likelihood decoder is employed. We further develop two computationally tractable algorithms for joint sparse support recovery in the centralized setting. One algorithm minimizes a cost function defined as the sum of the likelihood function and the $l_{1,\infty }$ quasi-norm, while the other algorithm extends the binary iterative hard thresholding algorithm to the multiple measurement vector case. Second, we consider a decentralized setting where each node transmits 1-b measurements to its one-hop neighbors. The basic idea behind the algorithms developed in the decentralized setting is to embed collaboration among nodes and fusion strategies. We show that even with noisy 1-b compressed measurements, joint support recovery can be carried out accurately in both centralized and decentralized settings. We further show that the performance of the proposed 1-bit compressive sensing-based algorithms is very close to that of their real-valued counterparts except when the signal-to-noise ratio is very small.