Abstract:One-bit sampling has emerged as a promising technique in multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) radar systems due to its ability to significantly reduce data volume and processing requirements. Nevertheless, current detection methods have not adequately addressed the impact of colored noise, which is frequently encountered in real scenarios. In this paper, we present a novel detection method that accounts for colored noise in MIMO radar systems. Specifically, we derive Rao's test by computing the derivative of the likelihood function with respect to the target reflectivity parameter and the Fisher information matrix, resulting in a detector that takes the form of a weighted matched filter. To ensure the constant false alarm rate (CFAR) property, we also consider noise covariance uncertainty and examine its effect on the probability of false alarm. The detection probability is also studied analytically. Simulation results demonstrate that the proposed detector provides considerable performance gains in the presence of colored noise.
Abstract:The state-of-the-art deep neural networks (DNNs) have been widely applied for various real-world applications, and achieved significant performance for cognitive problems. However, the increment of DNNs' width and depth in architecture results in a huge amount of parameters to challenge the storage and memory cost, limiting to the usage of DNNs on resource-constrained platforms, such as portable devices. By converting redundant models into compact ones, compression technique appears to be a practical solution to reducing the storage and memory consumption. In this paper, we develop a nonlinear tensor ring network (NTRN) in which both fullyconnected and convolutional layers are compressed via tensor ring decomposition. Furthermore, to mitigate the accuracy loss caused by compression, a nonlinear activation function is embedded into the tensor contraction and convolution operations inside the compressed layer. Experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness and superiority of the proposed NTRN for image classification using two basic neural networks, LeNet-5 and VGG-11 on three datasets, viz. MNIST, Fashion MNIST and Cifar-10.