Abstract:Generative AI (GenAI) has emerged as a transformative technology, enabling customized and personalized AI-generated content (AIGC) services. In this paper, we address challenges of edge-enabled AIGC service provisioning, which remain underexplored in the literature. These services require executing GenAI models with billions of parameters, posing significant obstacles to resource-limited wireless edge. We subsequently introduce the formulation of joint model caching and resource allocation for AIGC services to balance a trade-off between AIGC quality and latency metrics. We obtain mathematical relationships of these metrics with the computational resources required by GenAI models via experimentation. Afterward, we decompose the formulation into a model caching subproblem on a long-timescale and a resource allocation subproblem on a short-timescale. Since the variables to be solved are discrete and continuous, respectively, we leverage a double deep Q-network (DDQN) algorithm to solve the former subproblem and propose a diffusion-based deep deterministic policy gradient (D3PG) algorithm to solve the latter. The proposed D3PG algorithm makes an innovative use of diffusion models as the actor network to determine optimal resource allocation decisions. Consequently, we integrate these two learning methods within the overarching two-timescale deep reinforcement learning (T2DRL) algorithm, the performance of which is studied through comparative numerical simulations.
Abstract:Radio frequency fingerprinting (RFF) is a promising device authentication technique for securing the Internet of things. It exploits the intrinsic and unique hardware impairments of the transmitters for RF device identification. In real-world communication systems, hardware impairments across transmitters are subtle, which are difficult to model explicitly. Recently, due to the superior performance of deep learning (DL)-based classification models on real-world datasets, DL networks have been explored for RFF. Most existing DL-based RFF models use a single representation of radio signals as the input. Multi-channel input model can leverage information from different representations of radio signals and improve the identification accuracy of the RF fingerprint. In this work, we propose a novel multi-channel attentive feature fusion (McAFF) method for RFF. It utilizes multi-channel neural features extracted from multiple representations of radio signals, including IQ samples, carrier frequency offset, fast Fourier transform coefficients and short-time Fourier transform coefficients, for better RF fingerprint identification. The features extracted from different channels are fused adaptively using a shared attention module, where the weights of neural features from multiple channels are learned during training the McAFF model. In addition, we design a signal identification module using a convolution-based ResNeXt block to map the fused features to device identities. To evaluate the identification performance of the proposed method, we construct a WiFi dataset, named WFDI, using commercial WiFi end-devices as the transmitters and a Universal Software Radio Peripheral (USRP) as the receiver. ...