8 research outputs found

    Cell fault management using machine learning techniques

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    This paper surveys the literature relating to the application of machine learning to fault management in cellular networks from an operational perspective. We summarise the main issues as 5G networks evolve, and their implications for fault management. We describe the relevant machine learning techniques through to deep learning, and survey the progress which has been made in their application, based on the building blocks of a typical fault management system. We review recent work to develop the abilities of deep learning systems to explain and justify their recommendations to network operators. We discuss forthcoming changes in network architecture which are likely to impact fault management and offer a vision of how fault management systems can exploit deep learning in the future. We identify a series of research topics for further study in order to achieve this

    Design techniques for smart and energy-efficient wireless body sensor networks

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    Tesis inédita de la Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Facultad de Informática, Departamento de Arquitectura de Computadores y Automática, leída el 26/10/2012Las redes inalámbricas de sensores corporales (en inglés: "wireless body sensor networks" o WBSNs) para monitorización, diagnóstico y detección de emergencias, están ganando popularidad y están llamadas a cambiar profundamente la asistencia sanitaria en los próximos años. El uso de estas redes permite una supervisión continua, contribuyendo a la prevención y el diagnóstico precoz de enfermedades, al tiempo que mejora la autonomía del paciente con respecto a otros sistemas de monitorización actuales. Valiéndose de esta tecnología, esta tesis propone el desarrollo de un sistema de monitorización de electrocardiograma (ECG), que no sólo muestre continuamente el ECG del paciente, sino que además lo analice en tiempo real y sea capaz de dar información sobre el estado del corazón a través de un dispositivo móvil. Esta información también puede ser enviada al personal médico en tiempo real. Si ocurre un evento peligroso, el sistema lo detectará automáticamente e informará de inmediato al paciente y al personal médico, posibilitando una rápida reacción en caso de emergencia. Para conseguir la implementación de dicho sistema, se desarrollan y optimizan distintos algoritmos de procesamiento de ECG en tiempo real, que incluyen filtrado, detección de puntos característicos y clasificación de arritmias. Esta tesis también aborda la mejora de la eficiencia energética de la red de sensores, cumpliendo con los requisitos de fidelidad y rendimiento de la aplicación. Para ello se proponen técnicas de diseño para reducir el consumo de energía, que permitan buscar un compromiso óptimo entre el tamaño de la batería y su tiempo de vida. Si el consumo de energía puede reducirse lo suficiente, sería posible desarrollar una red que funcione permanentemente. Por lo tanto, el muestreo, procesamiento, almacenamiento y transmisión inalámbrica tienen que hacerse de manera que se suministren todos los datos relevantes, pero con el menor consumo posible de energía, minimizando así el tamaño de la batería (que condiciona el tamaño total del nodo) y la frecuencia de recarga de la batería (otro factor clave para su usabilidad). Por lo tanto, para lograr una mejora en la eficiencia energética del sistema de monitorización y análisis de ECG propuesto en esta tesis, se estudian varias soluciones a nivel de control de acceso al medio y sistema operativo.Depto. de Arquitectura de Computadores y AutomáticaFac. de InformáticaTRUEunpu

    A New Paradigm for Proactive Self-Healing in Future Self-Organizing Mobile Cellular Networks

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    Mobile cellular network operators spend nearly a quarter of their revenue on network management and maintenance. Remarkably, a significant proportion of that budget is spent on resolving outages that degrade or disrupt cellular services. Historically, operators have mainly relied on human expertise to identify, diagnose and resolve such outages while also compensating for them in the short-term. However, with ambitious quality of experience expectations from 5th generation and beyond mobile cellular networks spurring research towards technologies such as ultra-dense heterogeneous networks and millimeter wave spectrum utilization, discovering and compensating coverage lapses in future networks will be a major challenge. Numerous studies have explored heuristic, analytical and machine learning-based solutions to autonomously detect, diagnose and compensate cell outages in legacy mobile cellular networks, a branch of research known as self-healing. This dissertation focuses on self-healing techniques for future mobile cellular networks, with special focus on outage detection and avoidance components of self-healing. Network outages can be classified into two primary types: 1) full and 2) partial. Full outages result from failed soft or hard components of network entities while partial outages are generally a consequence of parametric misconfiguration. To this end, chapter 2 of this dissertation is dedicated to a detailed survey of research on detecting, diagnosing and compensating full outages as well as a detailed analysis of studies on proactive outage avoidance schemes and their challenges. A key observation from the analysis of the state-of-the-art outage detection techniques is their dependence on full network coverage data, susceptibility to noise or randomness in the data and inability to characterize outages in both spacial domain and temporal domain. To overcome these limitations, chapters 3 and 4 present two unique and novel outage detection techniques. Chapter 3 presents an outage detection technique based on entropy field decomposition which combines information field theory and entropy spectrum pathways theory and is robust to noise variance. Chapter 4 presents a deep learning neural network algorithm which is robust to data sparsity and compares it with entropy field decomposition and other state-of-the-art machine learning-based outage detection algorithms including support vector machines, K-means clustering, independent component analysis and deep auto-encoders. Based on the insights obtained regarding the impact of partial outages, chapter 5 presents a complete framework for 5th generation and beyond mobile cellular networks that is designed to avoid partial outages caused by parametric misconfiguration. The power of the proposed framework is demonstrated by leveraging it to design a solution that tackles one of the most common problems associated with ultra-dense heterogeneous networks, namely imbalanced load among small and macro cells, and poor resource utilization as a consequence. The optimization problem is formulated as a function of two hard parameters namely antenna tilt and transmit power, and a soft parameter, cell individual offset, that affect the coverage, capacity and load directly. The resulting solution is a combination of the otherwise conflicting coverage and capacity optimization and load balancing self-organizing network functions

    XXIII Congreso Argentino de Ciencias de la Computación - CACIC 2017 : Libro de actas

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    Trabajos presentados en el XXIII Congreso Argentino de Ciencias de la Computación (CACIC), celebrado en la ciudad de La Plata los días 9 al 13 de octubre de 2017, organizado por la Red de Universidades con Carreras en Informática (RedUNCI) y la Facultad de Informática de la Universidad Nacional de La Plata (UNLP).Red de Universidades con Carreras en Informática (RedUNCI

    Continuous versus Discrete Model in Autodiagnosis Systems for Wireless Networks

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