Biometrics is a technique used to define, assess, and quantify a person's physical and behavioral property. In recent history, deep learning has shown impressive progress in several places, including computer vision and natural language processing for supervised learning. Since biometrics deals with a person's traits, it mainly involves supervised learning and may exploit deep learning effectiveness in other similar fields. In this article, a survey of more than 60 promising biometric works using deep learning is provided, illustrating their strengths and potential in various applications. The paper starts with biometric basics, transfer learning in deep biometrics, an overview of convolutional neural networks, and then survey work. We address all the strategies and datasets used along with their accuracy. Further, some of the main challenges when utilizing these biometric recognition models and potential future avenues for research into this field are also addressed.
This paper investigates deep learning (DL) non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) receivers based on long short-term memory (LSTM) under Rayleigh fading channel circumstances. The performance comparison between the DL NOMA detector and the traditional NOMA method is established, and results have shown that the DL-based NOMA detector performance is far better in comparison with conventional NOMA detectors. Simulation curves are compared with the performance of the DL detector in terms of minimum mean square estimate (MMSE) and least square error (LSE) estimate, taking all realistic circumstances, except the cyclic prefix (CP), and clipping distortion into account. The simulation curves demonstrate that the performance of the DL-based detector is exceptionally good when it equals 1 when the noise signal ratio (SNR) is more than 15 dB, assuming that the DL method is more resilient to clipping distortion.
This work examines the efficacy of deep learning (DL) based non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) receivers in vehicular communications (VC). Analytical formulations for the outage probability (OP), symbol error rate (SER), and ergodic sum rate for the researched vehicle networks are established Rusing i.i.d. Nakagami-m fading links. Standard receivers, such as least square (LS) and minimum mean square error (MMSE), are outperformed by the stacked long-short term memory (S-LSTM) based DL-NOMA receiver. Under real time propagation circumstances, including the cyclic prefix (CP) and clipping distortion, the simulation curves compare the performance of MMSE and LS receivers with that of the DL-NOMA receiver. According to numerical statistics, NOMA outperforms conventional orthogonal multiple access (OMA) by roughly 20% and has a high sum rate when considering i.i.d. fading links.
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