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 doa estimation


Mobile Jamming Mitigation in 5G Networks: A MUSIC-Based Adaptive Beamforming Approach

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Abstract--Mobile jammers pose a critical threat to 5G networks, particularly in military communications. This paper investigates an anti-jamming framework that enhances a strong adaptive beamforming baseline comprising Multiple Signal Classification (MUSIC) for Direction-of-Arrival (DoA) estimation and Minimum V ariance Distortionless Response (MVDR) for interference suppression with a lightweight machine learning (ML) model for predictive error correction. Extensive simulations in a realistic highway scenario demonstrate that the integrated system achieves a high DoA estimation accuracy of up to 99.8% and an average Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) improvement of 9.58 dB. Analysis reveals that the MUSIC-MVDR baseline alone accounts for the vast majority of this performance gain (9.46 dB), indicating that the primary benefit of the simple ML model lies in correcting outlier estimates rather than providing a substantial systemic SNR increase. The framework's computational efficiency validates the effectiveness of the core beamforming approach and highlights the critical trade-off between ML model complexity and practical performance gains for securing 5G communications in contested environments.


DOA Estimation with Lightweight Network on LLM-Aided Simulated Acoustic Scenes

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Direction-of-Arrival (DOA) estimation is critical in spatial audio and acoustic signal processing, with wide-ranging applications in real-world. Most existing DOA models are trained on synthetic data by convolving clean speech with room impulse responses (RIRs), which limits their generalizability due to constrained acoustic diversity. In this paper, we revisit DOA estimation using a recently introduced dataset constructed with the assistance of large language models (LLMs), which provides more realistic and diverse spatial audio scenes. We benchmark several representative neural-based DOA methods on this dataset and propose LightDOA, a lightweight DOA estimation model based on depthwise separable convolutions, specifically designed for mutil-channel input in varying environments. Experimental results show that LightDOA achieves satisfactory accuracy and robustness across various acoustic scenes while maintaining low computational complexity. This study not only highlights the potential of spatial audio synthesized with the assistance of LLMs in advancing robust and efficient DOA estimation research, but also highlights LightDOA as efficient solution for resource-constrained applications.


(SP)$^2$-Net: A Neural Spatial Spectrum Method for DOA Estimation

arXiv.org Machine Learning

We consider the problem of estimating the directions of arrival (DOAs) of multiple sources from a single snapshot of an antenna array, a task with many practical applications. In such settings, the classical Bartlett beamformer is commonly used, as maximum likelihood estimation becomes impractical when the number of sources is unknown or large, and spectral methods based on the sample covariance are not applicable due to the lack of multiple snapshots. However, the accuracy and resolution of the Bartlett beamformer are fundamentally limited by the array aperture. In this paper, we propose a deep learning technique, comprising a novel architecture and training strategy, for generating a high-resolution spatial spectrum from a single snapshot. Specifically, we train a deep neural network that takes the measurements and a hypothesis angle as input and learns to output a score consistent with the capabilities of a much wider array. At inference time, a heatmap can be produced by scanning an arbitrary set of angles. We demonstrate the advantages of our trained model, named (SP)$^2$-Net, over the Bartlett beamformer and sparsity-based DOA estimation methods.


Meta-training of diffractive meta-neural networks for super-resolution direction of arrival estimation

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Diffractive neural networks leverage the high-dimensional characteristics of electromagnetic (EM) fields for high-throughput computing. However, the existing architectures face challenges in integrating large-scale multidimensional metasurfaces with precise network training and haven't utilized multidimensional EM field coding scheme for super-resolution sensing. Here, we propose diffractive meta-neural networks (DMNNs) for accurate EM field modulation through metasurfaces, which enable multidimensional multiplexing and coding for multi-task learning and high-throughput super-resolution direction of arrival estimation. DMNN integrates pre-trained mini-metanets to characterize the amplitude and phase responses of meta-atoms across different polarizations and frequencies, with structure parameters inversely designed using the gradient-based meta-training. For wide-field super-resolution angle estimation, the system simultaneously resolves azimuthal and elevational angles through x and y-polarization channels, while the interleaving of frequency-multiplexed angular intervals generates spectral-encoded optical super-oscillations to achieve full-angle high-resolution estimation. Post-processing lightweight electronic neural networks further enhance the performance. Experimental results validate that a three-layer DMNN operating at 27 GHz, 29 GHz, and 31 GHz achieves $\sim7\times$ Rayleigh diffraction-limited angular resolution (0.5$^\circ$), a mean absolute error of 0.048$^\circ$ for two incoherent targets within a $\pm 11.5^\circ$ field of view, and an angular estimation throughput an order of magnitude higher (1917) than that of existing methods. The proposed architecture advances high-dimensional photonic computing systems by utilizing inherent high-parallelism and all-optical coding methods for ultra-high-resolution, high-throughput applications.


DNN-based Methods of Jointly Sensing Number and Directions of Targets via a Green Massive H2AD MIMO Receiver

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

As a green MIMO structure, the heterogeneous hybrid analog-digital H2AD MIMO architecture has been shown to own a great potential to replace the massive or extremely large-scale fully-digital MIMO in the future wireless networks to address the three challenging problems faced by the latter: high energy consumption, high circuit cost, and high complexity. However, how to intelligently sense the number and direction of multi-emitters via such a structure is still an open hard problem. To address this, we propose a two-stage sensing framework that jointly estimates the number and direction values of multiple targets. Specifically, three target number sensing methods are designed: an improved eigen-domain clustering (EDC) framework, an enhanced deep neural network (DNN) based on five key statistical features, and an improved one-dimensional convolutional neural network (1D-CNN) utilizing full eigenvalues. Subsequently, a low-complexity and high-accuracy DOA estimation is achieved via the introduced online micro-clustering (OMC-DOA) method. Furthermore, we derive the Cramรฉr-Rao lower bound (CRLB) for the H2AD under multiple-source conditions as a theoretical performance benchmark. Simulation results show that the developed three methods achieve 100\% number of targets sensing at moderate-to-high SNRs, while the improved 1D-CNN exhibits superior under extremely-low SNR conditions. The introduced OMC-DOA outperforms existing clustering and fusion-based DOA methods in multi-source environments.


Steering Deep Non-Linear Spatially Selective Filters for Weakly Guided Extraction of Moving Speakers in Dynamic Scenarios

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Recent speaker extraction methods using deep non-linear spatial filtering perform exceptionally well when the target direction is known and stationary. However, spatially dynamic scenarios are considerably more challenging due to time-varying spatial features and arising ambiguities, e.g. when moving speakers cross. While in a static scenario it may be easy for a user to point to the target's direction, manually tracking a moving speaker is impractical. Instead of relying on accurate time-dependent directional cues, which we refer to as strong guidance, in this paper we propose a weakly guided extraction method solely depending on the target's initial position to cope with spatial dynamic scenarios. By incorporating our own deep tracking algorithm and developing a joint training strategy on a synthetic dataset, we demonstrate the proficiency of our approach in resolving spatial ambiguities and even outperform a mismatched, but strongly guided extraction method.


Spatial Audio Processing with Large Language Model on Wearable Devices

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Integrating spatial context into large language models (LLMs) has the potential to revolutionize human-computer interaction, particularly in wearable devices. In this work, we present a novel system architecture that incorporates spatial speech understanding into LLMs, enabling contextually aware and adaptive applications for wearable technologies. Our approach leverages microstructure-based spatial sensing to extract precise Direction of Arrival (DoA) information using a monaural microphone. To address the lack of existing dataset for microstructure-assisted speech recordings, we synthetically create a dataset called OmniTalk by using the LibriSpeech dataset. This spatial information is fused with linguistic embeddings from OpenAI's Whisper model, allowing each modality to learn complementary contextual representations. The fused embeddings are aligned with the input space of LLaMA-3.2 3B model and fine-tuned with lightweight adaptation technique LoRA to optimize for on-device processing. SING supports spatially-aware automatic speech recognition (ASR), achieving a mean error of $25.72^\circ$-a substantial improvement compared to the 88.52$^\circ$ median error in existing work-with a word error rate (WER) of 5.3. SING also supports soundscaping, for example, inference how many people were talking and their directions, with up to 5 people and a median DoA error of 16$^\circ$. Our system demonstrates superior performance in spatial speech understanding while addressing the challenges of power efficiency, privacy, and hardware constraints, paving the way for advanced applications in augmented reality, accessibility, and immersive experiences.


Digital Beamforming Enhanced Radar Odometry

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Radar has become an essential sensor for autonomous navigation, especially in challenging environments where camera and LiDAR sensors fail. 4D single-chip millimeter-wave radar systems, in particular, have drawn increasing attention thanks to their ability to provide spatial and Doppler information with low hardware cost and power consumption. However, most single-chip radar systems using traditional signal processing, such as Fast Fourier Transform, suffer from limited spatial resolution in radar detection, significantly limiting the performance of radar-based odometry and Simultaneous Localization and Mapping (SLAM) systems. In this paper, we develop a novel radar signal processing pipeline that integrates spatial domain beamforming techniques, and extend it to 3D Direction of Arrival estimation. Experiments using public datasets are conducted to evaluate and compare the performance of our proposed signal processing pipeline against traditional methodologies. These tests specifically focus on assessing structural precision across diverse scenes and measuring odometry accuracy in different radar odometry systems. This research demonstrates the feasibility of achieving more accurate radar odometry by simply replacing the standard FFT-based processing with the proposed pipeline. The codes are available at GitHub*.


A Comparative Study of Invariance-Aware Loss Functions for Deep Learning-based Gridless Direction-of-Arrival Estimation

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Covariance matrix reconstruction has been the most widely used guiding objective in gridless direction-of-arrival (DoA) estimation for sparse linear arrays. Many semidefinite programming (SDP)-based methods fall under this category. Although deep learning-based approaches enable the construction of more sophisticated objective functions, most methods still rely on covariance matrix reconstruction. In this paper, we propose new loss functions that are invariant to the scaling of the matrices and provide a comparative study of losses with varying degrees of invariance. The proposed loss functions are formulated based on the scale-invariant signal-to-distortion ratio between the target matrix and the Gram matrix of the prediction. Numerical results show that a scale-invariant loss outperforms its non-invariant counterpart but is inferior to the recently proposed subspace loss that is invariant to the change of basis. These results provide evidence that designing loss functions with greater degrees of invariance is advantageous in deep learning-based gridless DoA estimation.


Advancing Single-Snapshot DOA Estimation with Siamese Neural Networks for Sparse Linear Arrays

arXiv.org Machine Learning

Single-snapshot signal processing in sparse linear arrays has become increasingly vital, particularly in dynamic environments like automotive radar systems, where only limited snapshots are available. These arrays are often utilized either to cut manufacturing costs or result from unintended antenna failures, leading to challenges such as high sidelobe levels and compromised accuracy in direction-of-arrival (DOA) estimation. Despite deep learning's success in tasks such as DOA estimation, the need for extensive training data to increase target numbers or improve angular resolution poses significant challenges. In response, this paper presents a novel Siamese neural network (SNN) featuring a sparse augmentation layer, which enhances signal feature embedding and DOA estimation accuracy in sparse arrays. We demonstrate the enhanced DOA estimation performance of our approach through detailed feature analysis and performance evaluation. The code for this study is available at https://github.com/ruxinzh/SNNS_SLA.