Cognitive interference channels with confidential messages

Yingbin Liang, Anelia Somekh-Baruch, H. Vincent Poor, Shlomo Shamai, Sergio Verdú

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

20 Scopus citations

Abstract

The cognitive interference channel with confidential messages is studied. Similarly to the classical two-user interference channel, the cognitive interference channel consists of two transmitters whose signals interfere at the two receivers. It is assumed that there is a common message source (message known to both transmitters, and an additional independent message source (message 2) known only to the cognitive transmitter (transmitter 2). The cognitive receiver (receiver needs to decode both messages, while the non-cognitive receiver (receiver 1) should decode only the common message. Furthermore, message 2 is assumed to be a confidential message which needs to be kept as secret as possible from receiver 1, which is viewed as an eavesdropper with regard to message 2. The level of secrecy is measured by the equivocation rate. A single-letter expression for the capacity-equivocation region of the discrete memoryless cognitive interference channel is established and is further explicitly derived for the Gaussian case. Moreover, particularizing the capacity-equivocation region to the case without a secrecy constraint, establishes a new capacity theorem for a class of interference channels, by providing a converse theorem.
Original languageEnglish
Journal45th Annual Allerton Conference on Communication, Control, and Computing 2007
Volume1
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2007

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