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Successive interference cancellation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Successive Interference Cancellation (SIC) is a technique used by a receiver in a wireless data transmission that allows decoding of two or more packets that arrived simultaneously (in a regular system, more packets arriving at the same time cause a collision).

SIC is achieved by the receiver decoding the stronger signal first, subtracting it from the combined signal and then decoding the difference as the weaker signal.[1]

References

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  1. ^ Sen, Souvik; Santhapuri, Naveen; Choudhury, Romit Roy; Nelakuditi, Srihari (2010). "Successive Interference Cancellation: A Back-of-the-envelope Perspective" (PDF). Proceedings of the 9th ACM SIGCOMM Workshop on Hot Topics in Networks. Monterey, California: 1–6. doi:10.1145/1868447.1868464. S2CID 13295350. Retrieved December 26, 2018.