A Framework for Uplink ISAC Receiver Designs: Performance Analysis and Algorithm Development
Pith reviewed 2026-05-23 01:15 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
A flexible projection receiver unifies projection and successive interference cancellation receivers for uplink ISAC by tuning a tradeoff factor between the two approaches.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The FP-type receiver unifies the projection-type receiver and the successive interference cancellation receiver by using a flexible tradeoff factor to adapt to dynamically changing uplink ISAC scenarios. The FP-type receiver addresses the joint signal detection and target response estimation problem through two coordinated phases: communication signal detection using a reconstructed signal whose composition is controlled by the tradeoff factor, followed by target response estimation performed through subtraction of the detected communication signal from the received signal. With adjustable tradeoff factors, the FP-type receiver can balance the enhancement of the signal-to-interference-plus-
What carries the argument
The flexible projection (FP)-type receiver, which uses a single tradeoff factor to control the composition of the reconstructed communication signal in a two-phase detection-then-estimation procedure.
If this is right
- The optimal tradeoff factor must be chosen according to whether maximum-likelihood or zero-forcing detection is used and according to the relative power of the sensing and communication signals.
- The dynamic flexible projection receiver improves adaptability by iteratively updating the tradeoff factor during operation.
- The length of the jointly processed signal must increase in proportion to the number of receive antennas to realize the full performance gain of the framework.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Receivers built on this tradeoff mechanism could switch between detection modes on the fly without requiring separate hardware paths for different interference regimes.
- The same two-phase structure with an adjustable factor may apply to multi-user or downlink ISAC settings where interference statistics also vary over time.
- System designers would need power-estimation modules accurate enough to select or adapt the factor in real time for the claimed gains to appear in hardware.
Load-bearing premise
The joint signal detection and target response estimation problem can be cleanly split into two phases where the tradeoff factor directly governs performance by changing how much of the communication signal is reconstructed versus cancelled.
What would settle it
Run Monte Carlo trials of the uplink ISAC link while sweeping the tradeoff factor across a range of sensing-to-communication power ratios; if the minimum error rate achieved by any fixed tradeoff factor is no better than the best of the pure projection or pure SIC receivers in at least half the tested ratios, the unification benefit is not supported.
Figures
read the original abstract
Uplink integrated sensing and communication (ISAC) systems have recently emerged as a promising research direction, enabling simultaneous uplink signal detection and target sensing. {In this paper, we propose the flexible projection (FP)-type receiver that unifies the projection-type receiver and the successive interference cancellation (SIC)-type receiver by using a flexible tradeoff factor to adapt to dynamically changing uplink ISAC scenarios.} The FP-type receiver addresses the joint signal detection and target response estimation problem through two coordinated phases: 1) Communication signal detection using a reconstructed signal whose composition is controlled by the tradeoff factor, followed by 2) Target response estimation performed through subtraction of the detected communication signal from the received signal. With adjustable tradeoff factors, the FP-type receiver can balance the enhancement of the signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR) with the reduction of correlation in the reconstructed signal for communication signal detection. The pairwise error probability (PEP) expressions are analyzed for both the maximum likelihood (ML) and the zero-forcing (ZF) detectors, revealing that the optimal tradeoff factor should be determined based on the adopted detection algorithm and the relative power of the sensing and communication (S\&C) signals. A homotopy optimization framework is first applied for the FP-type receiver with a fixed tradeoff factor. This framework is then extended to develop the dynamic flexible projection (DFP)-type receiver, which iteratively adjusts the tradeoff factor for improved algorithm performance and environmental adaptability. Finally, we show that the length of the jointly processed signal should scale with the antenna size to fully unleash the potential of the uplink ISAC receiver.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript proposes a flexible projection (FP)-type receiver for uplink integrated sensing and communication (ISAC) systems. This receiver unifies the projection-type and successive interference cancellation (SIC)-type receivers through a flexible tradeoff factor that controls the composition of the reconstructed communication signal in a two-phase procedure: communication signal detection followed by target response estimation. The paper analyzes pairwise error probability (PEP) for maximum likelihood (ML) and zero-forcing (ZF) detectors, develops a homotopy optimization framework for fixed and dynamic tradeoff factors (DFP-type receiver), and shows that the jointly processed signal length should scale with antenna size.
Significance. If the unification property is rigorously established and the optimization yields the claimed performance gains, the work provides a valuable adaptive framework for uplink ISAC receivers that can balance SINR enhancement and correlation reduction in dynamic scenarios. The PEP analysis offers insights into optimal tradeoff selection depending on the detector and relative S&C powers, and the scaling result highlights a fundamental design consideration.
major comments (1)
- [Abstract and FP-type receiver definition] The unification claim—that the FP-type receiver unifies the projection-type and SIC-type receivers via the tradeoff factor—requires explicit demonstration that the boundary values of the tradeoff factor recover the exact standard definitions of those receivers. The description of the two coordinated phases indicates that the factor controls the reconstructed signal composition but does not provide the mathematical parameterization or limiting-case analysis needed to verify this property. This verification is load-bearing for the central contribution and the subsequent performance analysis.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful reading and constructive feedback. We address the single major comment below.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract and FP-type receiver definition] The unification claim—that the FP-type receiver unifies the projection-type and SIC-type receivers via the tradeoff factor—requires explicit demonstration that the boundary values of the tradeoff factor recover the exact standard definitions of those receivers. The description of the two coordinated phases indicates that the factor controls the reconstructed signal composition but does not provide the mathematical parameterization or limiting-case analysis needed to verify this property. This verification is load-bearing for the central contribution and the subsequent performance analysis.
Authors: We agree that the unification property requires explicit verification via limiting cases to be fully rigorous. In the revised manuscript we will add a dedicated paragraph (or short subsection) immediately after the FP-type receiver definition that introduces the precise mathematical form of the tradeoff factor α in the reconstructed signal expression and derives the two boundary cases: as α → 0 the receiver reduces exactly to the standard projection-type receiver, and as α → 1 it reduces exactly to the standard SIC-type receiver. These derivations will be connected to the existing two-phase procedure and will confirm equivalence with the conventional definitions used in the literature. The PEP analysis, homotopy optimization, and scaling result remain unchanged because they operate on the parameterized receiver; only the presentation of the unification claim will be strengthened. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: unification is definitional parameterization; PEP and optimization analyses are independent of fitted inputs
full rationale
The paper proposes the FP-type receiver as a parameterized generalization of projection-type and SIC-type receivers via an explicit tradeoff factor controlling signal reconstruction in a two-phase procedure. This unification is introduced by construction in the abstract and does not claim to derive one receiver type from another via external first principles that later reduce to the parameter itself. The subsequent PEP analysis for ML/ZF detectors and the homotopy optimization framework (including the DFP extension) are presented as derived from the signal model and detection algorithms, with no quoted equations showing a fitted parameter renamed as a prediction or a self-citation chain substituting for independent verification. No load-bearing step reduces by the paper's own equations to its inputs; the design is self-contained against the stated uplink ISAC model.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
free parameters (1)
- tradeoff factor
Forward citations
Cited by 1 Pith paper
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Rate-Splitting--Inspired Bistatic OFDM-ISAC
A rate-splitting-inspired framework for bistatic OFDM-ISAC that splits messages into robust and supplementary streams to manage interference, derives SINR expressions, and optimizes power allocation for spectral effic...
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