• DocumentCode
    1124567
  • Title

    Flip CRC Modification for Message Length Detection

  • Author

    Shieh, Shin-Lin ; Chen, Po-Ning ; Han, Yunghsiang S.

  • Author_Institution
    Sunplus mMobile, Inc., Hsinchu
  • Volume
    55
  • Issue
    9
  • fYear
    2007
  • Firstpage
    1747
  • Lastpage
    1756
  • Abstract
    Cyclic redundancy check (CRC) bits that are conventionally used for error detection have recently found a new application in universal mobile telecommunications system standard for message length detection of variable-length message communications. It was anticipated that the CRC bits, when they are coworked with the inner convolutional code, can be used to detect the receiver-unaware of the message length-without much degradation in their error detection capability. This is unfortunately not true when the offset or difference between the wrong detected length and the true length is small. Two improvements, i.e., the DoCoMo´s reverse CRC method and the flip CRC method, were accordingly proposed. In this paper, we revisited the flip CRC modification by considering the impact of joint decoding of the CRC code and the convolutional code. By generalizing the condition for the selection of the flip polynomials, we found that under error-free transmission, the range of the length offsets, at which the false length probability conditioning on the true message length can be made exactly zero (and hence, is minimized), can be extended from to , where and are, respectively, the number of the CRC bits and the memory order of the convolutional code. In addition, an upper bound and a lower bound for the overall false length probability with respect to a uniform pick of the true message length over a candidate message length set are derived. It is then confirmed numerically that the two bounds almost coincide for moderate value. Simulations show that the false length probability obtained analytically under error-free transmission assumption only mildly degrades for moderate-to-high SNRs. Interestingly, we also found that the system block error rate of the flip CRC method can be well approximated by the performance curve of the adopted convolutional code up to a certain SNR, and approach an error floor determined well by the previously derived false length probability bounds beyo- nd this SNR, thereby facilitating the selection of the system parameters, such as the number of CRC bits and the memory order of the convolutional code.
  • Keywords
    3G mobile communication; convolutional codes; cyclic redundancy check codes; error detection codes; error statistics; probability; CRC bits; CRC code; blind rate detection; blind transport format detection; cyclic redundancy check; error detection; error-free transmission; false length probability; flip CRC modification; flip polynomials; inner convolutional code; joint decoding; length offsets; message length detection; system block error rate; universal mobile telecommunications system standard; variable-length message communications; Analytical models; Communication standards; Convolutional codes; Cyclic redundancy check; Decoding; Degradation; Error analysis; Mobile communication; Telecommunication standards; Upper bound; Blind rate detection; blind transport format detection; cyclic redundancy check (CRC); length detection; variable-length message;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Communications, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0090-6778
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TCOMM.2007.904392
  • Filename
    4303365