13 research outputs found

    Signal reconstruction in structures with two channels

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    Doutoramento em Engenharia ElectrotécnicaEm sistemas ATM e transmissões em tempo real através de redes IP, os dados são transmitidos em pacotes de informação. Os pacotes perdidos ou muito atrasados levam à perda de informação em posições conhecidas (apagamentos). Contudo, em algumas situações as posições dos erros não são conhecidas e, portanto, a detecção dos erros tem que ser realizada usando um polinómio conhecido. A detecção e correcção de erros são estudadas para sinais digitais em códigos DFT em dois canais que apresentam muito melhor estabilidade que os respectivos códigos DFT num único canal. Para a estrutura de dois canais, um canal processa um código DFT normal, quanto que o outro canal inclui uma permutação, a razão principal para a melhoria na estabilidade. A permutação introduz aleatoriedade e é esta aleatoriedade que é responsável pela boa estabilidade destes códigos. O estudo dos códigos aleatórios vêm confirmar esta afirmação. Para sinais analógicos, foca-se a amostragem funcional e derivativa, onde um canal processa amostras do sinal e o outro processa amostras da derivada do sinal. A expansão sobreamostrada é apresentada e a recuperação de apagamentos é estudada. Neste caso, a estabilidade para a esturtura em dois canais quando a perda de amostras afecta ambos os canais é, em geral, muito pobre. Adicionalmente, a reconstrução de sinais tanto analógicos como digitais é tratada para o modelo do conversor integrate-and-fire. A reconstrução faz uso dos tempos de acção e de valores limites inerentes ao modelo e é viável por meio de um método iterativo baseado em projecções em conjuntos convexos (POCS).In ATM as in real time transmissions over IP networks, the data are transmitted packet by packet. Lost or highly delayed packets lead to lost information in known locations (erasures). However, in some situations the error locations are not known and, therefore, error detection must be performed using a known polynomial. Error detection and correction are studied for digital signals in two-channel DFT codes which presents a much better stability than their single channel counterparts. For the two-channel structure, one channel processes an ordinary DFT code, while the other channel includes an interleaver, the main reason for the improvement in stability. The interleaver introduces randomness and it is this randomness that is responsible for the good stability of these codes. The study of random codes helps confirm this statement. For analogical signals, the focus is given to function and derivative sampling, where one channel processes samples of the signal and the other processes samples of the derivative of the signal. The oversampled expansion is presented and erasure recovery is studied. In this case, the stability of the twochannel structure when sample loss affects both channels is, in general, very poor. Additionally, the reconstruction of analogical as well as digital signals is dealt with for the integrate-and-fire converter model. The reconstruction makes use of the firing times and the threshold values inherent to the model and is viable by means of an iterative method based on projections onto convex sets (POCS)

    A unified approach to sparse signal processing

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    A unified view of the area of sparse signal processing is presented in tutorial form by bringing together various fields in which the property of sparsity has been successfully exploited. For each of these fields, various algorithms and techniques, which have been developed to leverage sparsity, are described succinctly. The common potential benefits of significant reduction in sampling rate and processing manipulations through sparse signal processing are revealed. The key application domains of sparse signal processing are sampling, coding, spectral estimation, array processing, compo-nent analysis, and multipath channel estimation. In terms of the sampling process and reconstruction algorithms, linkages are made with random sampling, compressed sensing and rate of innovation. The redundancy introduced by channel coding i

    Resource allocation for OCI reduction in OFDM-based asynchronous cellular systems

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    Orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) is considered as one of the most promising techniques for next generation mobile systems. When the OFDM is applied to cellular environments, it may suffer from so-called other-cell interference (OCI). In this paper, we propose a novel resource allocation scheme in OFDM-based asynchronous cellular systems. It can reduce the OCI by exploiting the repetitive property of a cyclic prefix (CP) of OFDM symbols. The proposed scheme can be applied to OFDM-frequency division multiple access (FDMA) and OFDM-code division multiple access (CDMA) systems. Computer simulation results show that the proposed scheme can reduce the OCI by nearly up to 1dB in a typical cellular OFDM environment, compared to the conventional scheme.Ministry of Information & Communications, Kore

    Error-resilient multi-view video plus depth based 3-D video coding

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    Three Dimensional (3-D) video, by definition, is a collection of signals that can provide depth perception of a 3-D scene. With the development of 3-D display technologies and interactive multimedia systems, 3-D video has attracted significant interest from both industries and academia with a variety of applications. In order to provide desired services in various 3-D video applications, the multiview video plus depth (MVD) representation, which can facilitate the generation of virtual views, has been determined to be the best format for 3-D video data. Similar to 2-D video, compressed 3-D video is highly sensitive to transmission errors due to errors propagated from the current frame to the future predicted frames. Moreover, since the virtual views required for auto-stereoscopic displays are rendered from the compressed texture videos and depth maps, transmission errors of the distorted texture videos and depth maps can be further propagated to the virtual views. Besides, the distortions in texture and depth show different effects on the rendering views. Therefore, compared to the reliability of the transmission of the 2-D video, error-resilient texture video and depth map coding are facing major new challenges. This research concentrates on improving the error resilience performance of MVD-based 3-D video in packet loss scenarios. Based on the analysis of the propagating behaviour of transmission errors, a Wyner-Ziv (WZ)-based error-resilient algorithm is first designed for coding of the multi-view video data or depth data. In this scheme, an auxiliary redundant stream encoded according to WZ principle is employed to protect a primary stream encoded with standard multi-view video coding codec. Then, considering the fact that different combinations of texture and depth coding mode will exhibit varying robustness to transmission errors, a rate-distortion optimized mode switching scheme is proposed to strike the optimal trade-off between robustness and compression effciency. In this approach, the texture and depth modes are jointly optimized by minimizing the overall distortion of both the coded and synthesized views subject to a given bit rate. Finally, this study extends the research on the reliable transmission of view synthesis prediction (VSP)-based 3-D video. In order to mitigate the prediction position error caused by packet losses in the depth map, a novel disparity vector correction algorithm is developed, where the corrected disparity vector is calculated from the depth error. To facilitate decoder error concealment, the depth error is recursively estimated at the decoder. The contributions of this dissertation are multifold. First, the proposed WZbased error-resilient algorithm can accurately characterize the effect of transmission error on multi-view distortion at the transform domain in consideration of both temporal and inter-view error propagation, and based on the estimated distortion, this algorithm can perform optimal WZ bit allocation at the encoder through explicitly developing a sophisticated rate allocation strategy. This proposed algorithm is able to provide a finer granularity in performing rate adaptivity and unequal error protection for multi-view data, not only at the frame level, but also at the bit-plane level. Secondly, in the proposed mode switching scheme, a new analytic model is formulated to optimally estimate the view synthesis distortion due to packet losses, in which the compound impact of the transmission distortions of both the texture video and the depth map on the quality of the synthesized view is mathematically analysed. The accuracy of this view synthesis distortion model is demonstrated via simulation results and, further, the estimated distortion is integrated into a rate-distortion framework for optimal mode switching to achieve substantial performance gains over state-of-the-art algorithms. Last, but not least, this dissertation provides a preliminary investigation of VSP-based 3-D video over unreliable channel. In the proposed disparity vector correction algorithm, the pixel-level depth map error can be precisely estimated at the decoder without the deterministic knowledge of the error-free reconstructed depth. The approximation of the innovation term involved in depth error estimation is proved theoretically. This algorithm is very useful to conceal the position-erroneous pixels whose disparity vectors are correctly received

    Communications protocols for wireless sensor networks in perturbed environment

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    This thesis is mainly in the Smart Grid (SG) domain. SGs improve the safety of electrical networks and allow a more adapted use of electricity storage, available in a limited way. SGs also increase overall energy efficiency by reducing peak consumption. The use of this technology is the most appropriate solution because it allows more efficient energy management. In this context, manufacturers such as Hydro-Quebec deploy sensor networks in the nerve centers to control major equipment. To reduce deployment costs and cabling complexity, the option of a wireless sensor network seems the most obvious solution. However, deploying a sensor network requires in-depth knowledge of the environment. High voltages substations are strategic points in the power grid and generate impulse noise that can degrade the performance of wireless communications. The works in this thesis are focused on the development of high performance communication protocols for the profoundly disturbed environments. For this purpose, we have proposed an approach based on the concatenation of rank metric and convolutional coding with orthogonal frequency division multiplexing. This technique is very efficient in reducing the bursty nature of impulsive noise while having a quite low level of complexity. Another solution based on a multi-antenna system is also designed. We have proposed a cooperative closed-loop coded MIMO system based on rank metric code and max−dmin precoder. The second technique is also an optimal solution for both improving the reliability of the system and energy saving in wireless sensor networks

    The 1991 3rd NASA Symposium on VLSI Design

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    Papers from the symposium are presented from the following sessions: (1) featured presentations 1; (2) very large scale integration (VLSI) circuit design; (3) VLSI architecture 1; (4) featured presentations 2; (5) neural networks; (6) VLSI architectures 2; (7) featured presentations 3; (8) verification 1; (9) analog design; (10) verification 2; (11) design innovations 1; (12) asynchronous design; and (13) design innovations 2
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