Physics-Supported Linear and Nonlinear Dimensionality Reduction for Supervised Adaptive Channel Selection in Hybrid RF-FSO-THz Communication Systems
Luis Miguel Pires, Vitor FialhoHybrid RF-FSO-THz communication systems are promising candidates for future Internet of Things (IoT) and 6G networks because they combine the robustness of radio frequency links, the high-capacity potential of Free-Space Optical communications, and the ultra-wideband capabilities of terahertz transmission. Adaptive channel selection in such systems depends on multiple correlated environmental and physical-layer variables, including distance, rain intensity, humidity, visibility, turbulence strength, signal-to-noise ratio, channel capacity, and energy-efficiency metrics. This paper presents a physics-supported benchmark framework for supervised adaptive channel selection in hybrid RF-FSO-THz systems and systematically investigates the impact of linear and nonlinear dimensionality-reduction techniques on predictive performance, statistical robustness, computational complexity, and physical interpretability. A multi-scenario dataset comprising 5000 samples was generated using calibrated RF, FSO, and THz propagation models under clear, rain, fog, and worst-case environmental conditions. Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and Kernel PCA were evaluated together with Random Forest, Support Vector Machines (SVMs), XGBoost, Gradient Boosting (GB), Multi-Layer Perceptron (MLP), Logistic Regression, and Decision Trees. The results demonstrate that PCA preserves nearly all predictive capabilities while reducing the original 33-dimensional feature space by approximately 81.8%, maintaining accuracies close to 97–98% with the best-performing classifiers. Statistical significance analysis confirms that PCA introduces only modest degradations, whereas Kernel PCA consistently reduces the predictive performance while increasing memory requirements and inference latency. Additional environmental-only validation experiments indicate that adaptive channel selection remains highly learnable even when only pre-selection environmental descriptors are available, partially mitigating concerns regarding self-consistency bias. Overall, the results suggest that PCA provides an advantageous compromise among predictive accuracy, computational efficiency, statistical robustness, and physical interpretability for supervised adaptive channel selection in physics-supported hybrid wireless communication systems.