Research Article
A Secure Cooperative Image Super-Resolution Transmission with Decode-and-Forward Relaying over Rayleigh Fading Channels
@ARTICLE{10.4108/eetinis.v11i4.6193, author={Ca V. Phan and Quoc-Tuan Vien and Hien-Thuan Duong}, title={A Secure Cooperative Image Super-Resolution Transmission with Decode-and-Forward Relaying over Rayleigh Fading Channels}, journal={EAI Endorsed Transactions on Industrial Networks and Intelligent Systems}, volume={11}, number={4}, publisher={EAI}, journal_a={INIS}, year={2024}, month={9}, keywords={Image communication, Deep learning, Image super-resolution, Random linear network coding, Cooperative communications, Wireless relay networks}, doi={10.4108/eetinis.v11i4.6193} }
- Ca V. Phan
Quoc-Tuan Vien
Hien-Thuan Duong
Year: 2024
A Secure Cooperative Image Super-Resolution Transmission with Decode-and-Forward Relaying over Rayleigh Fading Channels
INIS
EAI
DOI: 10.4108/eetinis.v11i4.6193
Abstract
In addition to susceptibility to performance degradation due to hardware malfunctions and environmental influences, wireless image transmission poses risks of information exposure to eavesdroppers. This paper delves into the image communications within wireless relay networks (WRNs) and proposes a secure cooperative relaying (SCR) protocol over Rayleigh fading channels. In this protocol, a source node (referred to as Alice) transmits superior-resolution (SR) images to a destination node (referred to as Bob) with the assistance of a mediating node (referred to as Relay) operating in decode-and-forward mode, all while contending with the presence of an eavesdropper (referred to as Eve). In order to conserve transmission bandwidth, Alice firstly reduces the size of the original SR images before transmitting them to Relay and Bob. Subsequently, random linear network coding (RLNC) is employed by both Alice and Relay on the downscaled poor-resolution (PR) images to obscure the original images from Eve, thereby bolstering the security of the image communications. Simulation results demonstrate that the proposed SCR protocol surpasses both secure relaying transmission without a direct link and secure direct transmission without relaying links.
Additionally, a slight reduction in image quality can be achieved by increasing the scaling factor for saving transmission bandwidth. Furthermore, the results highlight the SCR protocol’s superior effectiveness at Bob’s end when compared to Eve’s, which is due to Eve’s lack of access to the RLNC coefficient matrices and reference images utilised by Alice and Relay in the RLNC process. Finally, the evaluation of reference images, relay allocations and diversity reception over Rayleigh fading channels confirms the effectiveness of the SCR protocol for secure image communications in the WRNs.
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