Generation of decision feedback equalizer data using trellis...

Error detection/correction and fault detection/recovery – Pulse or data error handling – Digital data error correction

Reexamination Certificate

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C375S265000, C348S614000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06823489

ABSTRACT:

TECHNICAL FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is directed, in general, to digital communication devices and, more specifically, to a system and method for reducing errors in a decision feedback equalizer in an ATSC VSB receiver by utilizing symbol stream information from a trellis decoder.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The Digital High Definition Television (HDTV) Grand Alliance (Grand Alliance) is a group of television manufacturing and research organizations in the television industry. After years of cooperative effort the Grand Alliance developed and proposed a standard for digital HDTV systems. The Grand Alliance standard has been adopted (with a few changes) by the Federal Communication Commission (FCC) as an official broadcasting standard for HDTV. The standard is known as the Advanced Television Systems Committee Digital Television Standard (the “ATSC Standard”).
The ATSC Standard for HDTV transmission over terrestrial broadcast channels uses a signal that consists of a sequence of twelve (12) independent time-multiplexed trellis-coded data streams modulated as an eight (8) level vestigial sideband (VSB) symbol stream with a rate of 10.76 MHz. This signal is converted to a six (6) MHz frequency band that corresponds to a standard VHF or UHF terrestrial television channel, over which the signal is then broadcast.
The ATSC Standard calls for two (2) bit data symbols of the HDTV signal to be trellis encoded in accordance with an eight (8) level (i.e., a three (3) bit) one dimensional constellation. One bit of each data symbol is pre-coded, and the other is subjected to a 1/2 encoding rate that produces two coded bits in accordance with a four (4) state trellis code. For purposes of interleaving, twelve (12) identical encoders and pre-coders operate successively on every twelve successive data symbols. Symbols
0
,
12
,
24
,
36
, . . . are encoded as one series. Symbols
1
,
13
,
25
,
37
, . . . as a second series. Symbols
2
,
14
,
26
,
38
, . . . as a third series. And so on for a total of twelve (12) series. Therefore, the ATSC Standard requires twelve (12) trellis decoders in the HDTV receiver for the twelve (12) series of time division interleaved data symbols in the signal. Each trellis decoder in the HDTV receiver decodes every twelfth (12th) data symbol in the stream of coded data symbols.
In an ATSC Standard receiver trellis decoders are used to retrieve the original digital data that was trellis encoded just before being converted to 8-VSB symbols, modulated and broadcast. The use of trellis coding provides an improvement in the signal to noise ratio of the received signal, and the time multiplexing of twelve (12) independent streams reduces the possibility of co-channel interference from an analog NTSC broadcast signal residing on the same frequency. The abbreviation NTSC stands for National Television Standards Committee.
Each of the trellis decoders for the four (4) state trellis code operates in accordance with the well-known Viterbi decoding algorithm. Each of the decoders comprises a branch metric generator unit, an add-compare-select unit, and a path-memory unit. See, for example, “Trellis-coded Modulation With Redundant Signal Set, Part I, Introduction; Part II, State of the Art,” by G. Ungerboeck, IEEE Communications Magazine, Vol. 25, pp. 5-21, February 1987.
In addition to being corrupted by noise, the transmitted signal is also subject to deterministic channel distortions and distortions caused by multipath interference. Consequently, an adaptive channel equalizer is generally used in front of the trellis decoders to compensate for these effects. The goal is to create a symbol stream that resembles, as much as possible, the symbol stream that was created by the twelve (12) trellis encoders at the transmitter.
One commonly used equalizer architecture makes use of a second equalizer known as a decision feedback equalizer (DFE). In this architecture, a conventional, or forward equalizer (FE) is supplemented by a DFE. The input to the DFE is an estimate of the original transmitted value of the current output symbol of the complete equalizer (FE and DFE). The output of the decision feedback equalizer (DFE) is subsequently added to the output of the forward equalizer (FE) to generate the output symbol. In a typical implementation, this estimate of the output symbol is obtained by simply “slicing” the equalizer output. The term “slicing” refers to the process of taking the allowed symbol value (of the eight (8) levels specified by the 8-VSB ATSC Standard) that is nearest to that of the actual output. Using the “sliced” symbols in a decision feedback equalizer (DFE) gives a near optimum error rate performance with low complexity. This approach, however, can suffer from error propagation caused by slicing errors. Because the typical symbol error rate after the equalizer for the HDTV signal can be up to twenty percent (20%), this can be a serious problem if the number of DFE filter taps is large.
After the equalizer, the HDTV signal is decoded in a trellis decoder that uses the Viterbi algorithm to decode the symbol stream based on the 1/2 rate trellis coding performed in the transmitter. As previously mentioned, the ATSC Standard specifies that twelve (12) trellis encoders and decoders are used in parallel in a time multiplexed fashion. Trellis decoding is then followed by byte de-interleaving and Reed Solomon decoding to further correct transmission errors in the signal.
There is a need in the art for a system and method that will reduce error propagation in a decision feedback equalizer used in an ATSC VSB receiver.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
To address the above-discussed deficiencies of the prior art, the system and method of the present invention reduces error propagation in a decision feedback equalizer in an ATSC VSB receiver by utilizing symbol stream information from a trellis decoder.
The output symbols from the adaptive channel equalizer are input to a trellis decoder. The trellis decoder uses “soft” decision making to determine the most likely symbol values that were originally transmitted as opposed to “hard” decision making such as “slicing.” Soft decision methods take into account the restricted set of values that the symbol following a symbol having a given value is permitted to assume by the trellis encoder. Soft decision methods use this additional information to obtain a more reliable estimate of the actual value than can be obtained by hard decision methods that only consider the current symbol.
The system and method of the present invention uses information from the trellis decoder to generate an estimate of the equalizer output that serves as the input to the decision feedback equalizer (DFE). The system and method of the present invention essentially incorporates a trellis decoder into the equalizer to provide the estimates of the actual symbol values that are needed by the decision feedback equalizer (DFE). Due to the nature of the Viterbi algorithm, which performs a trace-back over a path consisting of previously received symbols and having a specified length, an estimate is provided not only for the current symbol, but for all of the previous symbols that constitute this path. Since the Viterbi algorithm is known to provide the best estimate of the value of the transmitted symbol data under conditions of Gaussian channel noise, such an approach results in more reliable data being input to the decision feedback equalizer (DFE) than was possible using simple slicing of the equalizer output. This in turn results in better equalizer performance, and therefore in more reliable data being input to the trellis decoder.
A related method uses a second equalizer, whose decision feedback equalizer (DFE) input is the output of this trellis decoder as well as the training sequence for the equalizer adaptation. Since the trellis decoder provides an optimum estimate of the symbol data, its output can be reliably used as a training sequence even though it is only an estimate and does not constitute a priori knowledge of the transmitted

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