IEEE Open Journal of Antennas and Propagation (Jan 2020)
Learning Parameters of Stochastic Radio Channel Models From Summaries
Abstract
Estimating parameters of stochastic radio channel models based on new measurement data is an arduous task usually involving multiple steps such as multipath extraction and clustering. We propose two different machine learning methods, one based on approximate Bayesian computation (ABC) and the other on deep learning, for fitting stochastic channel models to data directly. The proposed methods make use of easy-to-compute summary statistics of measured data instead of relying on extracted multipath components. Moreover, the need for post-processing of the extracted multipath components is omitted. Taking the polarimetric propagation graph model as an example stochastic model, we present relevant summaries and evaluate the performance of the proposed methods on simulated and measured data. We find that the methods are able to learn the parameters of the model accurately in simulations. Applying the methods on 60 GHz indoor measurement data yields parameter estimates that generate averaged power delay profile from the model that fits the data.
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