For the purpose of overcoming the random permutation ambiguity of the frequency-domain-independent component analysis (FDICA) for blind separation of convolutive mixtures, this paper proposes an independent vector analysis (IVA) detection receiver for blindly deconvolving the convolutive mixtures of digitally modulated signals for wireless communications. The foundation of IVA is through jointly carrying out separation work for different frequency bin data fusion, and the dependencies of frequency bins are exploited in solving the random permutation problem of separation signals. In addition, IVA uses multivariate prior distributions instead of the univariate distribution used in FDICA. Multivariate prior distribution is employed to preserve the interfrequency dependencies for individual sources, which can give rise to separation performance enhancement. Simulation results and analysis corroborate the effectiveness of the proposed detection method.
With the advent of the era of big data information, artificial intelligence (AI) methods have become extremely promising and attractive. It has become extremely important to extract useful signals by decomposing various mixed signals through blind source separation (BSS). BSS has been proven to have prominent applications in multichannel audio processing. For multichannel speech signals, independent component analysis (ICA) requires a certain statistical independence of source signals and other conditions to allow blind separation. independent vector analysis (IVA) is an extension of ICA for the simultaneous separation of multiple parallel mixed signals. IVA solves the problem of arrangement ambiguity caused by independent component analysis by exploiting the dependencies between source signal components and plays a crucial role in dealing with the problem of convolutional blind signal separation. So far, many researchers have made great contributions to the improvement of this algorithm by adopting different methods to optimize the update rules of the algorithm, accelerate the convergence speed of the algorithm, enhance the separation performance of the algorithm, and adapt to different application scenarios. This meaningful and attractive research work prompted us to conduct a comprehensive survey of this field. This paper briefly reviews the basic principles of the BSS problem, ICA, and IVA and focuses on the existing IVA-based optimization update rule techniques. Additionally, the experimental results show that the AuxIVA-IPA method has the best performance in the deterministic environment, followed by AuxIVA-IP2, and the OverIVA-IP2 has the best performance in the overdetermined environment. The performance of the IVA-NG method is not very optimistic in all environments.
In this paper, a computationally efficient optimization algorithm for independent vector analysis (IVA) is proposed to accelerate iterative convergence speed and enhance the overdetermined convolutive blind speech separation performance. An iterative projection with adjustment (IPA) is investigated to estimate the unmixing matrix for OverIVA. The IPA algorithm jointly executes the iterative projection (IP) algorithm and the iterative source steering (ISS) algorithm to jointly update one row and one column of the mixing matrix, which can perform computationally-efficient blind source separation. It is achieved by updating one demixing filter and jointly adjusting all the other sources along its current direction. Motivated by its technology superiorities, this paper proposes a modified algorithm for the OverIVA, fully exploiting the computational efficiency of IPA optimization scheme. Experimental results corroborate the proposed OverIVA-IPA algorithm converges faster and performs better than the existing state-of-the-arts algorithms.
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