185 research outputs found

    Final report on the evaluation of RRM/CRRM algorithms

    Get PDF
    Deliverable public del projecte EVERESTThis deliverable provides a definition and a complete evaluation of the RRM/CRRM algorithms selected in D11 and D15, and evolved and refined on an iterative process. The evaluation will be carried out by means of simulations using the simulators provided at D07, and D14.Preprin

    Telemedicine

    Get PDF
    Telemedicine is a rapidly evolving field as new technologies are implemented for example for the development of wireless sensors, quality data transmission. Using the Internet applications such as counseling, clinical consultation support and home care monitoring and management are more and more realized, which improves access to high level medical care in underserved areas. The 23 chapters of this book present manifold examples of telemedicine treating both theoretical and practical foundations and application scenarios

    Energy-efficient wireless communication

    Get PDF
    In this chapter we present an energy-efficient highly adaptive network interface architecture and a novel data link layer protocol for wireless networks that provides Quality of Service (QoS) support for diverse traffic types. Due to the dynamic nature of wireless networks, adaptations in bandwidth scheduling and error control are necessary to achieve energy efficiency and an acceptable quality of service. In our approach we apply adaptability through all layers of the protocol stack, and provide feedback to the applications. In this way the applications can adapt the data streams, and the network protocols can adapt the communication parameters

    An intelligent approach to quality of service for MPEG-4 video transmission in IEEE 802.15.1

    Get PDF
    Nowadays, wireless connectivity is becoming ubiquitous spreading to companies and in domestic areas. IEEE 802.15.1 commonly known as Bluetooth is high-quality, high-security, high-speed and low-cost radio signal technology. This wireless technology allows a maximum access range of 100 meters yet needs power as low as 1mW. Regrettably, IEEE 802.15.1 has a very limited bandwidth. This limitation can become a real problem If the user wishes to transmit a large amount of data in a very short time. The version 1.2 which is used in this project could only carry a maximum download rate of 724Kbps and an upload rate of 54Kbps In its asynchronous mode. But video needs a very large bandwidth to be transmitted with a sufficient level of quality. Video transmission over IEEE 802.15.1 networks would therefore be difficult to achieve, due to the limited bandwidth. Hence, a solution to transmit digital video with a sufficient quality of picture to arrive at the receiving end is required. A hybrid scheme has been developed in this thesis, comprises of a fuzzy logic set of rules and an artificial neural network algorithms. MPEG-4 video compression has been used in this work to optimise the transmission. This research further utilises an ‘added-buffer’ to prevent excessive data loss of MPEG-4 video over IEEE 802.15.1transmission and subsequently increase picture quality. The neural-fuzzy scheme regulates the output rate of the added-buffer to ensure that MPEG-4 video stream conforms to the traffic conditions of the IEEE 802.15.1 channel during the transmission period, that is to send more data when the bandwidth is not fully used and keep the data in the buffers if the bandwidth is overused. Computer simulation results confirm that intelligence techniques and added-buffer do improve quality of picture, reduce data loss and communication delay, as compared with conventional MPEG video transmission over IEEE 802.15.1

    Recent Advances in Wireless Communications and Networks

    Get PDF
    This book focuses on the current hottest issues from the lowest layers to the upper layers of wireless communication networks and provides "real-time" research progress on these issues. The authors have made every effort to systematically organize the information on these topics to make it easily accessible to readers of any level. This book also maintains the balance between current research results and their theoretical support. In this book, a variety of novel techniques in wireless communications and networks are investigated. The authors attempt to present these topics in detail. Insightful and reader-friendly descriptions are presented to nourish readers of any level, from practicing and knowledgeable communication engineers to beginning or professional researchers. All interested readers can easily find noteworthy materials in much greater detail than in previous publications and in the references cited in these chapters

    ACUTA Journal of Telecommunications in Higher Education

    Get PDF
    In This Issue Classroom Technology: Practical Approaches Synchronous Blended Learning Using Videoconferencing over lP Planning for Classroom Audiovisual Technologies Optimization Tools lmprove Bandwidth Bottom Line New Technologies Redefine the Classroom WiMax Facing the WMAN Challenge Mobility and the New Student lntegrating lnstructional and Network Technologies for Distance Education lnstitutional Excellence Award Honorable Mention Interview President\u27s Message From the Executive Director Here\u27s My Advic

    Indoor Radio Measurement and Planning for UMTS/HSPDA with Antennas

    Get PDF
    Over the last decade, mobile communication networks have evolved tremendously with a key focus on providing high speed data services in addition to voice. The third generation of mobile networks in the form of Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS) is already offering revolutionary mobile broadband experience to its users by deploying High Speed Downlink Packet Access (HSDPA) as its packet-data technology. With data speeds up to 14.4 Mbps and ubiquitous mobility, HSDPA is anticipated to become a preferred broadband access medium for end-users via mobile phones, laptops etc. While majority of these end-users are located indoors most of the time, approximately 70-80% of the HSDPA traffic is estimated to originate from inside buildings. Thus for network operators, indoor coverage has become a necessity for technical and business reasons. Macro-cellular (outdoor) to indoor coverage is a natural inexpensive way of providing network coverage inside the buildings. However, it does not guarantee sufficient link quality required for optimal HSDPA operation. On the contrary, deploying a dedicated indoor system may be far too expensive from an operator\u27s point of view. In this thesis, the concept is laid for the understanding of indoor radio wave propagation in a campus building environment which could be used to plan and improve outdoor-to-indoor UMTS/HSDPA radio propagation performance. It will be shown that indoor range performance depends not only on the transmit power of an indoor antenna, but also on the product\u27s response to multipath and obstructions in the environment along the radio propagation path. An extensive measurement campaign will be executed in different indoor environments analogous to easy, medium and hard radio conditions. The effects of walls, ceilings, doors and other obstacles on measurement results would be observed. Chapter one gives a brief introduction to the evolution of UMTS and HSDPA. It goes on to talk about radio wave propagation and some important properties of antennas which must be considered when choosing an antenna for indoor radio propagation. The challenges of in-building network coverage and also the objectives of this thesis are also mentioned in this chapter. The evolution and standardization, network architecture, radio features and most importantly, the radio resource management features of UMTS/HSDPA are given in chapter two. In this chapter, the reason why Wideband Code Division Multiple Access (WCDMA) was specified and selected for 3G (UMTS) systems would be seen. The architecture of the radio access network, interfaces with the radio access network between base stations and radio network controllers (RNC), and the interface between the radio access network and the core network are also described in this chapter. The main features of HSDPA are mentioned at the end of the chapter. In chapter three the principles of the WCDMA air interface, including spreading, Rake reception, signal fading, power control and handovers are introduced. The different types and characteristics of the propagation environments and how they influence radio wave propagation are mentioned. UMTS transport, logical and physical channels are also mentioned, highlighting their significance and relationship in and with the network. Radio network planning for UMTS is discussed in chapter four. The outdoor planning process which includes dimensioning, detailed planning, optimization and monitoring is outlined. Indoor radio planning with distributed antenna systems (DAS), which is the idea and motivation behind this thesis work, is also discussed. The various antennas considered and the antenna that was selected for this thesis experiment was discussed in chapter five. The antenna radiation pattern, directivity, gain and input impedance were the properties of the antenna that were taken into consideration. The importance of the choice of the antenna for any particular type of indoor environment is also mentioned. In chapter six, the design and fabrication of the monopole antennas used for the experimental measurement is mentioned. The procedure for measurement and the equipment used are also discussed. The results gotten from the experiment are finally analyzed and discussed. In this chapter the effect of walls, floors, doors, ceilings and other obstacles on radio wave propagation will be seen. Finally, chapter seven concludes this thesis work and gives some directions for future work

    Radio Communications

    Get PDF
    In the last decades the restless evolution of information and communication technologies (ICT) brought to a deep transformation of our habits. The growth of the Internet and the advances in hardware and software implementations modiïŹed our way to communicate and to share information. In this book, an overview of the major issues faced today by researchers in the ïŹeld of radio communications is given through 35 high quality chapters written by specialists working in universities and research centers all over the world. Various aspects will be deeply discussed: channel modeling, beamforming, multiple antennas, cooperative networks, opportunistic scheduling, advanced admission control, handover management, systems performance assessment, routing issues in mobility conditions, localization, web security. Advanced techniques for the radio resource management will be discussed both in single and multiple radio technologies; either in infrastructure, mesh or ad hoc networks

    Gestion adaptative des ressources dans les réseaux maillés sans fil à multiples-radios multiples-canaux

    Full text link
    Depuis quelques annĂ©es, la recherche dans le domaine des rĂ©seaux maillĂ©s sans fil ("Wireless Mesh Network (WMN)" en anglais) suscite un grand intĂ©rĂȘt auprĂšs de la communautĂ© des chercheurs en tĂ©lĂ©communications. Ceci est dĂ» aux nombreux avantages que la technologie WMN offre, telles que l'installation facile et peu coĂ»teuse, la connectivitĂ© fiable et l'interopĂ©rabilitĂ© flexible avec d'autres rĂ©seaux existants (rĂ©seaux Wi-Fi, rĂ©seaux WiMax, rĂ©seaux cellulaires, rĂ©seaux de capteurs, etc.). Cependant, plusieurs problĂšmes restent encore Ă  rĂ©soudre comme le passage Ă  l'Ă©chelle, la sĂ©curitĂ©, la qualitĂ© de service (QdS), la gestion des ressources, etc. Ces problĂšmes persistent pour les WMNs, d'autant plus que le nombre des utilisateurs va en se multipliant. Il faut donc penser Ă  amĂ©liorer les protocoles existants ou Ă  en concevoir de nouveaux. L'objectif de notre recherche est de rĂ©soudre certaines des limitations rencontrĂ©es Ă  l'heure actuelle dans les WMNs et d'amĂ©liorer la QdS des applications multimĂ©dia temps-rĂ©el (par exemple, la voix). Le travail de recherche de cette thĂšse sera divisĂ© essentiellement en trois principaux volets: le contrĂŽle d‟admission du trafic, la diffĂ©rentiation du trafic et la rĂ©affectation adaptative des canaux lors de la prĂ©sence du trafic en relĂšve ("handoff" en anglais). Dans le premier volet, nous proposons un mĂ©canisme distribuĂ© de contrĂŽle d'admission se basant sur le concept des cliques (une clique correspond Ă  un sous-ensemble de liens logiques qui interfĂšrent les uns avec les autres) dans un rĂ©seau Ă  multiples-sauts, multiples-radios et multiples-canaux, appelĂ© RCAC. Nous proposons en particulier un modĂšle analytique qui calcule le ratio appropriĂ© d'admission du trafic et qui garantit une probabilitĂ© de perte de paquets dans le rĂ©seau n'excĂ©dant pas un seuil prĂ©dĂ©fini. Le mĂ©canisme RCAC permet d‟assurer la QdS requise pour les flux entrants, sans dĂ©grader la QdS des flux existants. Il permet aussi d‟assurer la QdS en termes de longueur du dĂ©lai de bout en bout pour les divers flux. Le deuxiĂšme volet traite de la diffĂ©rentiation de services dans le protocole IEEE 802.11s afin de permettre une meilleure QdS, notamment pour les applications avec des contraintes temporelles (par exemple, voix, visioconfĂ©rence). À cet Ă©gard, nous proposons un mĂ©canisme d'ajustement de tranches de temps ("time-slots"), selon la classe de service, ED-MDA (Enhanced Differentiated-Mesh Deterministic Access), combinĂ© Ă  un algorithme efficace de contrĂŽle d'admission EAC (Efficient Admission Control), afin de permettre une utilisation Ă©levĂ©e et efficace des ressources. Le mĂ©canisme EAC prend en compte le trafic en relĂšve et lui attribue une prioritĂ© supĂ©rieure par rapport au nouveau trafic pour minimiser les interruptions de communications en cours. Dans le troisiĂšme volet, nous nous intĂ©ressons Ă  minimiser le surcoĂ»t et le dĂ©lai de re-routage des utilisateurs mobiles et/ou des applications multimĂ©dia en rĂ©affectant les canaux dans les WMNs Ă  Multiples-Radios (MR-WMNs). En premier lieu, nous proposons un modĂšle d'optimisation qui maximise le dĂ©bit, amĂ©liore l'Ă©quitĂ© entre utilisateurs et minimise le surcoĂ»t dĂ» Ă  la relĂšve des appels. Ce modĂšle a Ă©tĂ© rĂ©solu par le logiciel CPLEX pour un nombre limitĂ© de noeuds. En second lieu, nous Ă©laborons des heuristiques/mĂ©ta-heuristiques centralisĂ©es pour permettre de rĂ©soudre ce modĂšle pour des rĂ©seaux de taille rĂ©elle. Finalement, nous proposons un algorithme pour rĂ©affecter en temps-rĂ©el et de façon prudente les canaux aux interfaces. Cet algorithme a pour objectif de minimiser le surcoĂ»t et le dĂ©lai du re-routage spĂ©cialement du trafic dynamique gĂ©nĂ©rĂ© par les appels en relĂšve. Ensuite, ce mĂ©canisme est amĂ©liorĂ© en prenant en compte lâ€ŸĂ©quilibrage de la charge entre cliques.In the last few years, Wireless Mesh Networks (WMNs) area brought a new field of advanced research among network specialized scientists. This is due to the many advantages which WMN technology offers, such as: easy and inexpensive installation, reliable connectivity and flexible interoperability with other existing networks (Wi-Fi, WiMax, Cellular, Sensors, WPAN networks, etc.). However, several problems still remain to be solved such as the scalability, the security, the quality of service (QoS), the resources management, etc. These problems persist for WMNs, therefore the researchers propose to improve the existing protocols or to conceive new protocols for WMNs. In order to solve some of the current limitations met in the wireless networks and to improve QoS of real time multimedia applications in such networks, our research will be divided primarily into three parts: traffic admission control, traffic differentiation and handoff-aware channel assignment schemes. In the first part, we propose a distributed admission control scheme for WMNs, namely, Routing on Cliques (a clique is defined as a subset of logical links that interfere with each other) Admission Control (RCAC). Particularly, we propose an analytical model to compute the appropriate acceptance ratio and guarantee that the packet loss probability in the network does not exceed a threshold value. The model also allows computing end-to-end delay to process flow requests with delay constraints. In the second part, we design an efficient scheduler for Mesh Deterministic Access (MDA) in IEEE 802.11s-based WMNs, called Enhanced Differentiated-MDA (ED-MDA) to support voice and video applications with strict requirements on delay and on blocking/dropping probability. ED-MDA together with Enhanced Admission Control, namely EAC, reserves the minimum amount of necessary resources while maintaining an acceptable handoff call dropping and high resource utilization. The final section addresses handoff-aware channel assignment (CA) problem in Multiple Radios WMNs (MR-WMNs). In this section, we first propose a multi-objective optimization model that, besides maximizing throughput, improves fairness and handoff experience of mesh clients. In this model, the Jain’s index is used to maximize users’ fairness and to allow same channel assignments to links involved in the same high handoff traffic, thus reducing handoff-triggered re-routing characterized by its high latency. Second, we solved this model to obtain exact solutions by the CPLEX software for a limited number of nodes. We therefore propose to use centralized heuristics/meta-heuristics algorithms as an offline CA process to obtain near-optimal solutions for larger instances (real size network). Moreover, in order to adapt to traffic dynamics caused especially by user handoffs, an online CA scheme is proposed that carefully re-assigns channels to interfaces with the purpose of continuously minimizing the re-routing overhead/latency during user handoffs. This online scheme is improved using load balancing

    ATM optical wireless networks

    Get PDF
    The aim of the research is to propose, design and evaluate a new wireless communication, local area network (LAN). Such a LAN will be able to extend the asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) wireline technology into indoor optical wireless networks
    • 

    corecore