51 research outputs found
Stable Recovery from the Magnitude of Symmetrized Fourier Measurements
In this note we show that stable recovery of complex-valued signals
up to global sign can be achieved from the magnitudes of
Fourier measurements when a certain "symmetrization and zero-padding" is
performed before measurement ( is possible in certain cases). For real
signals, symmetrization itself is linear and therefore our result is in this
case a statement on uniform phase retrieval. Since complex conjugation is
involved, such measurement procedure is not complex-linear but recovery is
still possible from magnitudes of linear measurements on, for example,
.Comment: 4 pages, will be submitted to ICASSP1
Optimal Deployments of UAVs With Directional Antennas for a Power-Efficient Coverage
To provide a reliable wireless uplink for users in a given ground area, one
can deploy Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) as base stations (BSs). In another
application, one can use UAVs to collect data from sensors on the ground. For a
power-efficient and scalable deployment of such flying BSs, directional
antennas can be utilized to efficiently cover arbitrary 2-D ground areas. We
consider a large-scale wireless path-loss model with a realistic
angle-dependent radiation pattern for the directional antennas. Based on such a
model, we determine the optimal 3-D deployment of N UAVs to minimize the
average transmit-power consumption of the users in a given target area. The
users are assumed to have identical transmitters with ideal omnidirectional
antennas and the UAVs have identical directional antennas with given half-power
beamwidth (HPBW) and symmetric radiation pattern along the vertical axis. For
uniformly distributed ground users, we show that the UAVs have to share a
common flight height in an optimal power-efficient deployment. We also derive
in closed-form the asymptotic optimal common flight height of UAVs in terms
of the area size, data-rate, bandwidth, HPBW, and path-loss exponent
Quantizers with Parameterized Distortion Measures
In many quantization problems, the distortion function is given by the
Euclidean metric to measure the distance of a source sample to any given
reproduction point of the quantizer. We will in this work regard distortion
functions, which are additively and multiplicatively weighted for each
reproduction point resulting in a heterogeneous quantization problem, as used
for example in deployment problems of sensor networks. Whereas, normally in
such problems, the average distortion is minimized for given weights
(parameters), we will optimize the quantization problem over all weights, i.e.,
we tune or control the distortion functions in our favor.
For a uniform source distribution in one-dimension, we derive the unique
minimizer, given as the uniform scalar quantizer with an optimal common weight.
By numerical simulations, we demonstrate that this result extends to
two-dimensions where asymptotically the parameter optimized quantizer is the
hexagonal lattice with common weights. As an application, we will determine the
optimal deployment of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to provide a wireless
communication to ground terminals under a minimal communication power cost.
Here, the optimal weights relate to the optimal flight heights of the UAVs.Comment: submitted to DCC 201
Discovering Beaten Paths in Collaborative Ontology-Engineering Projects using Markov Chains
Biomedical taxonomies, thesauri and ontologies in the form of the
International Classification of Diseases (ICD) as a taxonomy or the National
Cancer Institute Thesaurus as an OWL-based ontology, play a critical role in
acquiring, representing and processing information about human health. With
increasing adoption and relevance, biomedical ontologies have also
significantly increased in size. For example, the 11th revision of the ICD,
which is currently under active development by the WHO contains nearly 50,000
classes representing a vast variety of different diseases and causes of death.
This evolution in terms of size was accompanied by an evolution in the way
ontologies are engineered. Because no single individual has the expertise to
develop such large-scale ontologies, ontology-engineering projects have evolved
from small-scale efforts involving just a few domain experts to large-scale
projects that require effective collaboration between dozens or even hundreds
of experts, practitioners and other stakeholders. Understanding how these
stakeholders collaborate will enable us to improve editing environments that
support such collaborations. We uncover how large ontology-engineering
projects, such as the ICD in its 11th revision, unfold by analyzing usage logs
of five different biomedical ontology-engineering projects of varying sizes and
scopes using Markov chains. We discover intriguing interaction patterns (e.g.,
which properties users subsequently change) that suggest that large
collaborative ontology-engineering projects are governed by a few general
principles that determine and drive development. From our analysis, we identify
commonalities and differences between different projects that have implications
for project managers, ontology editors, developers and contributors working on
collaborative ontology-engineering projects and tools in the biomedical domain.Comment: Published in the Journal of Biomedical Informatic
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