145,933 research outputs found

    The SaPPART COST Action: Towards Positioning Integrity for Road Transport

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    Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) is becoming one of the main components supporting Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS) and value-added services in road transport and personal mobility. The use of GNSS is expected to grow significantly due to improvements in positioning performance, with positive impacts such as: finding the optimal route; improving traffic and travel efficiency as well as safety and security; reducing congestion and optimizing fuel consumption. The deployment of mission critical applications needs high reliability in the positioning information. However, the positioning reliability is not easy to achieve because of the heterogeneous quality of the GNSS signal, which is highly influenced by the road environment and the operational scenario of the application. It is important to understand the requirements and performance GNSS can achieve for various road transport applications. This paper is presenting the SaPPART COST Action on the Satellite Positioning Performance Assessment for Road Transport. It introduces the goal and the framework of the Action with the research programme and some related activities dedicated to dissemination and supporting standardisation working groups

    Enhanced Mobile Networking using Multi-connectivity and Packet Duplication in Next-Generation Cellular Networks

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    Modern cellular communication systems need to handle an enormous number of users and large amounts of data, including both users as well as system-oriented data. 5G is the fifth-generation mobile network and a new global wireless standard that follows 4G/LTE networks. The uptake of 5G is expected to be faster than any previous cellular generation, with high expectations of its future impact on the global economy. The next-generation 5G networks are designed to be flexible enough to adapt to modern use cases and be highly modular such that operators would have the flexibility to provide selective features based on user demand that could be implemented without investment in additional infrastructure. Thus, the underlying cellular network that is capable of delivering these expectations must be able to handle high data rates with low latency and ultra-reliability to fulfill these growing needs. Communication in the sub-6 GHz range cannot provide high throughputs due to the scarcity of spectrum in these bands. Using frequencies in FR2 or millimeter wave (mmWave) range for communication can provide large data rates and cover densely populated areas, but only over short distances as they are susceptible to blockages. This is why dense deployments of mmWave base stations are being considered to achieve very high data rates. But, such architectures lack the reliability needed to support many V2X applications, especially under mobility scenarios. As we have discussed earlier, 5G and beyond 5G networks must also account for UE\u27s mobility as they are expected to maintain their level of performance under different mobility scenarios and perform better than traditional networks. Although 5G technology has developed significantly in recent years, there still exists a critical gap in understanding how all these technologies would perform under mobility. There is a need to analyze and identify issues that arise with mobility and come up with solutions to overcome these hurdles without compromising the performance of these networks. Multi-connectivity (MC) refers to simultaneous connectivity with multiple radio access technologies or bands and potentially represents an important solution for the ongoing 5G deployments towards improving their performance. To address the network issues that come with mobility and fill that gap, this dissertation investigates the impact of multi-connectivity on next-generation networks from three distinct perspectives, 1) mobility enhancement using multi-connectivity in 5G networks, 2) improving reliability in mobility scenarios using multi-Connectivity with packet duplication, and 3) single grant multiple uplink scheme for performance improvement in mobility scenarios. The traditional macro-cell architecture of cellular networks that cover large geographical areas will struggle to deliver the dense coverage, low latency, and high bandwidth required by some 5G applications. Thus, 5G networks must utilize ultra-dense deployment of access points operating at higher mmWave frequency bands. But, for such dense networks, user mobility could be particularly challenging as it would reduce network efficiency and user-perceived service quality due to frequent handoffs. Multi-connectivity is seen as a key enabler in improving the performance of these next-generation networks. It enhances the system performance by providing multiple simultaneous links between the user equipment (UE) and the base stations (BS) for data transfer. Also, it eliminates the time needed to deal with frequent handoffs, link establishment, etc. Balancing the trade-offs among handoff rate, service delay, and achievable coverage/data rate in heterogeneous, dense, and diverse 5G cellular networks is, therefore, an open challenge. Hence, in this dissertation, we analyze how mobility impacts the performance of current Ultra-dense mmWave network (UDN) architecture in a city environment and discuss improvements for reducing the impact of mobility to meet 5G specifications using multi-connectivity. Current handover protocols, by design, suffer from interruption even if they are successful and, at the same time, carry the risk of failures during execution. The next-generation wireless networks, like 5G New Radio, introduce even stricter requirements that cannot be fulfilled with the traditional hard handover concept. Another expectation from these services is extreme reliability that will not tolerate any mobility-related failures. Thus, in this dissertation, we explore a novel technique using packet duplication and evaluate its performance under various mobility scenarios. We study how packet duplication can be used to meet the stringent reliability and latency requirements of modern cellular networks as data packets are duplicated and transmitted concurrently over two independent links. The idea is to generate multiple instances (duplicates) of a packet and transmit them simultaneously over different uncorrelated channels with the aim of reducing the packet failure probability. We also propose enhancements to the packet duplication feature to improve radio resource utilization. The wide variety of use cases in the 5G greatly differs from the use cases considered during the design of third-generation (3G) and fourth-generation (4G) long-term evolution (LTE) networks. Applications like autonomous driving, IoT applications, live video, etc., are much more uplink intensive as compared to traditional applications. However, the uplink performance is often, by design, lower than the downlink; hence, 5G must improve uplink performance. Hence, to meet the expected performance levels, there is a need to explore flexible network architectures for 5G networks. In this work, we propose a novel uplink scheme where the UE performs only a single transmission on a common channel, and every base station that can receive this signal would accept and process it. In our proposed architecture, a UE is connected to multiple mmWave capable distributed units (DUs), which are connected to a single gNB-central unit. In an ultra-dense deployment with multiple mmWave base stations around the UE, this removes the need to perform frequent handovers and allows high mobility with reduced latency. We develop and evaluate the performance of such a system for high throughput and reliable low latency communication under various mobility scenarios. To study the impact of mobility on next-generation networks, this work develops and systematically analyzes the performance of the 5G networks under mobility. We also look into the effect of increasing the number of users being served on the network. As a result, these studies are intended to understand better the network requirements for handling mobility and network load with multi-connectivity. This dissertation aims to achieve clarity and also proposes solutions for resolving these real-world network mobility issues

    Resilience Assignment Framework using System Dynamics and Fuzzy Logic.

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    This paper is concerned with the development of a conceptual framework that measures the resilience of the transport network under climate change related events. However, the conceptual framework could be adapted and quantified to suit each disruption’s unique impacts. The proposed resilience framework evaluates the changes in transport network performance in multi-stage processes; pre, during and after the disruption. The framework will be of use to decision makers in understanding the dynamic nature of resilience under various events. Furthermore, it could be used as an evaluation tool to gauge transport network performance and highlight weaknesses in the network. In this paper, the system dynamics approach and fuzzy logic theory are integrated and employed to study three characteristics of network resilience. The proposed methodology has been selected to overcome two dominant problems in transport modelling, namely complexity and uncertainty. The system dynamics approach is intended to overcome the double counting effect of extreme events on various resilience characteristics because of its ability to model the feedback process and time delay. On the other hand, fuzzy logic is used to model the relationships among different variables that are difficult to express in numerical form such as redundancy and mobility

    V2X Meets NOMA: Non-Orthogonal Multiple Access for 5G Enabled Vehicular Networks

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    Benefited from the widely deployed infrastructure, the LTE network has recently been considered as a promising candidate to support the vehicle-to-everything (V2X) services. However, with a massive number of devices accessing the V2X network in the future, the conventional OFDM-based LTE network faces the congestion issues due to its low efficiency of orthogonal access, resulting in significant access delay and posing a great challenge especially to safety-critical applications. The non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) technique has been well recognized as an effective solution for the future 5G cellular networks to provide broadband communications and massive connectivity. In this article, we investigate the applicability of NOMA in supporting cellular V2X services to achieve low latency and high reliability. Starting with a basic V2X unicast system, a novel NOMA-based scheme is proposed to tackle the technical hurdles in designing high spectral efficient scheduling and resource allocation schemes in the ultra dense topology. We then extend it to a more general V2X broadcasting system. Other NOMA-based extended V2X applications and some open issues are also discussed.Comment: Accepted by IEEE Wireless Communications Magazin

    Presenting the networked home: a content analysis of promotion material of Ambient Intelligence applications

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    Ambient Intelligence (AmI) for the home uses information and communication technologies to make users’ everyday life more comfortable. AmI is still in its developmental phase and is headed towards the first stages of diffusion. \ud Characteristics of AmI design can be observed, among others, in the promotion material of initial producers. A literature study revealed that AmI originally envisioned a central role for the user, convenience that AmI offers them and that attention should be paid to critical policy issues such as privacy and a potential loss of freedom. A content analysis of current promotion material of several high-tech companies revealed that these original ideas are not all reflected in the material. Attributes which were used most in the promotion material were ‘connectedness’, ‘control’, ‘easiness’ and ‘personalization’. An analysis of the pictures in the promotion material showed that almost half of the pictures contained no humans but appliances. These results only partly correspond to the original vision on AmI, since the emphasis is now on technology. The results represent a serious problem, since both users, as well as critical policy issues are underexposed in the current promotion material
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