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Main Authors: Fu, Jingwen, Xiao, Ming, Skoglund, Mikael
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.02333
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author Fu, Jingwen
Xiao, Ming
Skoglund, Mikael
author_facet Fu, Jingwen
Xiao, Ming
Skoglund, Mikael
contents Large language models (LLMs) are increasingly used as semantic encoders and decoders in semantic communication. However, current LLM based systems mostly remain monolithic: a single prompted model, or a tightly coupled transmitter/receiver pair, must jointly perform semantic encoding, channel adaptation, and semantic decoding. Such coupling makes intermediate decisions difficult to control, diagnose, or replace, and may cause channel corruption to propagate through a compressed source representation. To address the limitations, we propose \textbf{SkillCom}, a modular framework that decomposes LLM-based semantic communication into four explicit skills: semantic abstraction skill, channel-adaptive transmission skill, receiver-side repair skill, and task execution skill. These skills are interconnected through typed semantic-unit interfaces. Thus, transmission operates on structured unit-level representations rather than on one monolithic text block. This design localizes channel impairment, enables targeted repair from successfully received units, and supports stage-wise ablation and single-skill replacement under matched communication constraints. Experiments on multi-hop question answering and dialogue state tracking show that SkillCom consistently outperforms the monolithic LLM baseline, remains more robust under varying channel conditions, and exhibits task-dependent preferences over skill realizations. The results suggest that explicit skill decomposition provides a more robust and diagnosable foundation for LLM-based semantic communication than monolithic methods.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2605_02333
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle SkillCom: Decomposing LLM-based Semantic Communication into Task and Channel Aware Skills
Fu, Jingwen
Xiao, Ming
Skoglund, Mikael
Systems and Control
Large language models (LLMs) are increasingly used as semantic encoders and decoders in semantic communication. However, current LLM based systems mostly remain monolithic: a single prompted model, or a tightly coupled transmitter/receiver pair, must jointly perform semantic encoding, channel adaptation, and semantic decoding. Such coupling makes intermediate decisions difficult to control, diagnose, or replace, and may cause channel corruption to propagate through a compressed source representation. To address the limitations, we propose \textbf{SkillCom}, a modular framework that decomposes LLM-based semantic communication into four explicit skills: semantic abstraction skill, channel-adaptive transmission skill, receiver-side repair skill, and task execution skill. These skills are interconnected through typed semantic-unit interfaces. Thus, transmission operates on structured unit-level representations rather than on one monolithic text block. This design localizes channel impairment, enables targeted repair from successfully received units, and supports stage-wise ablation and single-skill replacement under matched communication constraints. Experiments on multi-hop question answering and dialogue state tracking show that SkillCom consistently outperforms the monolithic LLM baseline, remains more robust under varying channel conditions, and exhibits task-dependent preferences over skill realizations. The results suggest that explicit skill decomposition provides a more robust and diagnosable foundation for LLM-based semantic communication than monolithic methods.
title SkillCom: Decomposing LLM-based Semantic Communication into Task and Channel Aware Skills
topic Systems and Control
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.02333