We examine the problem of transmission control, i.e., when to transmit, in distributed wireless communications networks through the lens of multi-agent reinforcement learning. Most other works using reinforcement learning to control or schedule transmissions use some centralized control mechanism, whereas our approach is fully distributed. Each transmitter node is an independent reinforcement learning agent and does not have direct knowledge of the actions taken by other agents. We consider the case where only a subset of agents can successfully transmit at a time, so each agent must learn to act cooperatively with other agents. An agent may decide to transmit a certain number of steps into the future, but this decision is not communicated to the other agents, so it the task of the individual agents to attempt to transmit at appropriate times. We achieve this collaborative behavior through studying the effects of different actions spaces. We are agnostic to the physical layer, which makes our approach applicable to many types of networks. We submit that approaches similar to ours may be useful in other domains that use multi-agent reinforcement learning with independent agents.
Automatic RF modulation recognition is a primary signal intelligence (SIGINT) technique that serves as a physical layer authentication enabler and automated signal processing scheme for the beyond 5G and military networks. Most existing works rely on adopting deep neural network architectures to enable RF modulation recognition. The application of deep compression for the wireless domain, especially automatic RF modulation classification, is still in its infancy. Lightweight neural networks are key to sustain edge computation capability on resource-constrained platforms. In this letter, we provide an in-depth view of the state-of-the-art deep compression and acceleration techniques with an emphasis on edge deployment for beyond 5G networks. Finally, we present an extensive analysis of the representative acceleration approaches as a case study on automatic radar modulation classification and evaluate them in terms of the computational metrics.
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