119 research outputs found

    A study of data coding technology developments in the 1980-1985 time frame, volume 2

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    The source parameters of digitized analog data are discussed. Different data compression schemes are outlined and analysis of their implementation are presented. Finally, bandwidth compression techniques are given for video signals

    Advanced constellation and demapper schemes for next generation digital terrestrial television broadcasting systems

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    206 p.Esta tesis presenta un nuevo tipo de constelaciones llamadas no uniformes. Estos esquemas presentan una eficacia de hasta 1,8 dB superior a las utilizadas en los últimos sistemas de comunicaciones de televisión digital terrestre y son extrapolables a cualquier otro sistema de comunicaciones (satélite, móvil, cable¿). Además, este trabajo contribuye al diseño de constelaciones con una nueva metodología que reduce el tiempo de optimización de días/horas (metodologías actuales) a horas/minutos con la misma eficiencia. Todas las constelaciones diseñadas se testean bajo una plataforma creada en esta tesis que simula el estándar de radiodifusión terrestre más avanzado hasta la fecha (ATSC 3.0) bajo condiciones reales de funcionamiento.Por otro lado, para disminuir la latencia de decodificación de estas constelaciones esta tesis propone dos técnicas de detección/demapeo. Una es para constelaciones no uniformes de dos dimensiones la cual disminuye hasta en un 99,7% la complejidad del demapeo sin empeorar el funcionamiento del sistema. La segunda técnica de detección se centra en las constelaciones no uniformes de una dimensión y presenta hasta un 87,5% de reducción de la complejidad del receptor sin pérdidas en el rendimiento.Por último, este trabajo expone un completo estado del arte sobre tipos de constelaciones, modelos de sistema, y diseño/demapeo de constelaciones. Este estudio es el primero realizado en este campo

    Transmission of compressed images over power line channel

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    In the telecommunications industry, the use of existing power lines has drawn the attention of many researchers in the recent years. PLC suffers from impulsive noise that can affect data transmission by causing bit or burst errors. In this thesis, PLC channel was used as a transmission scheme to transmit compressed still images using FFT-OFDM. When lossy compression is applied to an image, a small loss of quality in the compressed image is tolerated. One of the challenging tasks in image compression and transmission is the trade-off between compression ratio and image quality. Therefore, we utilized the latest developments in quality assessment techniques, SSIM, to adaptively optimize this trade-off to the type of image application which the compression is being used for. A comparison between different compression techniques, namely, discrete cosine transform (DCT), discrete wavelet transform (DWT), and block truncation coding (BTC) was carried out. The performance criteria for our compression methods include the compression ratio, relative root-meansquared (RMS) error of the received data, and image quality evaluation via structural similarity index (SSIM). Every link in a powerline has its own attenuation profile depending on the length, layout, and cable types. Also, the influences of multipath fading due to reflections at branching point vary the attenuation profile of the link. As a result, we observed the effect of different parameters of the PLC channel based on the number of paths, and length of link on the quality of the image. Simulations showed that the image quality is highly affected by the interaction of the distance of PLC channel link and the number of multipath reflections. The PLC channel is assumed to be subjected to Gaussian and impulsive noises. There are two types of impulsive noise: asynchronous impulsive noise and periodic impulsive noise synchronous to the mains frequency. BER analysis was performed to compare the performance of the channel for the two types of impulsive noise under three impulsive scenarios. The first scenario is named as "heavily disturbed" and it was measured during the evening hours in a transformer substation in an industrial area. The second scenario is named as "moderately disturbed" and was recorded in a transformer substation in a residential area with detached and terraced houses. The third scenario is named as "weakly disturbed" and was recorded during night-time in an apartment located in a large building. The experiments conducted showed that both types of noise performed similarly in the three impulsive noise scenarios. We implemented Bose-Chaudhuri-Hocquenghen (BCH) coding to study the performance of Power Line Channel (PLC) impaired by impulsive noise and AWGN. BCH codes and RS codes are related and their decoding algorithms are quite similar. A comparison was made between un-coded system and BCH coding system. The performance of the system is assessed by the quality of the image for different sizes of BCH encoder, in three different impulsive environments. Simulation results showed that with BCH coding, the performance of the PLC system has improved dramatically in all three impulsive scenarios

    Evaluating and improving the performance of video content distribution in lossy networks

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    The contributions in this research are split in to three distinct, but related, areas. The focus of the work is based on improving the efficiency of video content distribution in the networks that are liable to packet loss, such as the Internet. Initially, the benefits and limitations of content distribution using Forward Error Correction (FEC) in conjunction with the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) is presented. Since added FEC can be used to reduce the number of retransmissions, the requirement for TCP to deal with any losses is greatly reduced. When real-time applications are needed, delay must be kept to a minimum, and retransmissions not desirable. A balance, therefore, between additional bandwidth and delays due to retransmissions must be struck. This is followed by the proposal of a hybrid transport, specifically for H.264 encoded video, as a compromise between the delay-prone TCP and the loss-prone UDP. It is argued that the playback quality at the receiver often need not be 100% perfect, providing a certain level is assured. Reliable TCP is used to transmit and guarantee delivery of the most important packets. The delay associated with the proposal is measured, and the potential for use as an alternative to the conventional methods of transporting video by either TCP or UDP alone is demonstrated. Finally, a new objective measurement is investigated for assessing the playback quality of video transported using TCP. A new metric is defined to characterise the quality of playback in terms of its continuity. Using packet traces generated from real TCP connections in a lossy environment, simulating the playback of a video is possible, whilst monitoring buffer behaviour to calculate pause intensity values. Subjective tests are conducted to verify the effectiveness of the metric introduced and show that the results of objective and subjective scores made are closely correlated

    On hard-decision forward error correction with application to high-throughput fiber-optic communications

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    The advent of the Internet not only changed the communication methods significantly, but also the life-style of the human beings. The number of Internet users has grown exponentially in the last decade, and the number of users exceeded 3.4 billion in 2016. Fiber links serve as the Internet backbone, hence, the fast grow of the Internet network and the sheer of new applications is highly driven by advances in optical communications. The emergence of coherent optical systems has led to a more efficient use of the available spectrum compared to traditional on-off keying transmission, and has made it possible to increase the supported data rates. To achieve high spectral efficiencies and improve the transmission reach, coding in combination with a higher order modulation, a scheme known as coded modulation (CM), has become indispensable in fiber-optic communications. In the recent years, graph-based codes such as low-density parity-check codes and soft decision decoding (SDD) have been adopted for long-haul coherent optical systems. SDD yields very high net coding gains but at the expense of a relatively high decoding complexity, which brings implementation challenges at very high data rates. Hard decision decoding (HDD) is an appealing alternative that reduces the decoding complexity. This motivates the focus of this thesis on forward error correction (FEC) with HDD for high-throughput, low power fiber-optic communications.In this thesis, we start by studying the performance bounds of HDD. In particular, we derive achievable information rates (AIRs) for CM with HDD for both bit-wise and symbol-wise decoding, and show that bit-wise HDD yields significantly higher AIRs. We also design nonbinary staircase codes using density evolution. Finite length simulation results of binary and nonbinary staircase codes corroborate the conclusions arising from the AIR analysis, i.e., for HDD binary codes are preferable. Then, we consider probabilistic shaping. In particular, we extend the probabilistic amplitude shaping (PAS) scheme recently introduced by B\uf6cherer et al. to HDD based on staircase codes. Finally, we focus on new decoding algorithms for product-like codes to close the gap between HDD and SDD, while keeping the decoding complexity low. In particular, we propose three novel decoding algorithms for product-like codes based on assisting the HDD with some level of soft information. The proposed algorithms provide a clear performance-complexity tradeoff. In particular, we show that up to roughly half of the gap between SDD and HDD can be closed with limited complexity increase with respect to HDD

    Cellular, Wide-Area, and Non-Terrestrial IoT: A Survey on 5G Advances and the Road Towards 6G

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    The next wave of wireless technologies is proliferating in connecting things among themselves as well as to humans. In the era of the Internet of things (IoT), billions of sensors, machines, vehicles, drones, and robots will be connected, making the world around us smarter. The IoT will encompass devices that must wirelessly communicate a diverse set of data gathered from the environment for myriad new applications. The ultimate goal is to extract insights from this data and develop solutions that improve quality of life and generate new revenue. Providing large-scale, long-lasting, reliable, and near real-time connectivity is the major challenge in enabling a smart connected world. This paper provides a comprehensive survey on existing and emerging communication solutions for serving IoT applications in the context of cellular, wide-area, as well as non-terrestrial networks. Specifically, wireless technology enhancements for providing IoT access in fifth-generation (5G) and beyond cellular networks, and communication networks over the unlicensed spectrum are presented. Aligned with the main key performance indicators of 5G and beyond 5G networks, we investigate solutions and standards that enable energy efficiency, reliability, low latency, and scalability (connection density) of current and future IoT networks. The solutions include grant-free access and channel coding for short-packet communications, non-orthogonal multiple access, and on-device intelligence. Further, a vision of new paradigm shifts in communication networks in the 2030s is provided, and the integration of the associated new technologies like artificial intelligence, non-terrestrial networks, and new spectra is elaborated. Finally, future research directions toward beyond 5G IoT networks are pointed out.Comment: Submitted for review to IEEE CS&
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