Wireless Semantic Communications
Concepts, Principles, and Challenges
1. Auflage Oktober 2024
224 Seiten, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
Understand the cutting-edge technology of semantic communications and its growing applications
Semantic communications constitute a revolution in wireless technology, combining semantic theory with wireless communication. In a semantic communication, essential information is encoded at the source, drastically reducing the required data usage, and then decoded at the destination in such a way that all key information is recovered, even if transmission is damaged or incomplete. Enhancing the correspondence between background knowledge at source and destination can drive the data usage requirement even lower, producing ultra-efficient information exchanges with ultra-low semantic ambiguity.
Wireless Semantic Communications offers a comprehensive overview of this groundbreaking field, its development, and its future application. Beginning with an introduction to semantic communications and its foundational principles, the book then proceeds to cover transceiver design and methods, before discussing use cases and future developments. The result is an indispensable resource for understanding the future of wireless communication.
Readers will also find:
* Analysis of transceiver optimization methods and resource management for semantic communication
* Detailed discussion of topics including semantic encoding and decoding, Shannon information theory, and many more
* A team of editors with decades of combined experience in the study of wireless communications
Wireless Semantic Communications is ideal for electrical and computing engineers and researchers, as well as industry professionals working in wireless communications.
Lan Zhang, PhD, is an Assistant Professor in the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department at Michigan Technological University, USA. She is also an Associate Editor of IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technologies, and has published widely on machine learning, wireless communications, and related fields.
Dusit Niyato, PhD, is President's Chair Professor in the School of Computer Science and Engineering, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. He serves as Editor-in-Chief for IEEE Communications Surveys and Tutorials, as well as an Area Editor for IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology and an Editor for IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications.
Muhammad Ali Imran, PhD, is a Professor in Communications Systems at the University of Glasgow, UK, Dean of Transnational Engineering Education and Dean of Graduate Studies in the College of Science and Engineering. He has published high impact articles on wireless communications and sensing subjects.