13,127 research outputs found
Mobile Computing in Digital Ecosystems: Design Issues and Challenges
In this paper we argue that the set of wireless, mobile devices (e.g.,
portable telephones, tablet PCs, GPS navigators, media players) commonly used
by human users enables the construction of what we term a digital ecosystem,
i.e., an ecosystem constructed out of so-called digital organisms (see below),
that can foster the development of novel distributed services. In this context,
a human user equipped with his/her own mobile devices, can be though of as a
digital organism (DO), a subsystem characterized by a set of peculiar features
and resources it can offer to the rest of the ecosystem for use from its peer
DOs. The internal organization of the DO must address issues of management of
its own resources, including power consumption. Inside the DO and among DOs,
peer-to-peer interaction mechanisms can be conveniently deployed to favor
resource sharing and data dissemination. Throughout this paper, we show that
most of the solutions and technologies needed to construct a digital ecosystem
are already available. What is still missing is a framework (i.e., mechanisms,
protocols, services) that can support effectively the integration and
cooperation of these technologies. In addition, in the following we show that
that framework can be implemented as a middleware subsystem that enables novel
and ubiquitous forms of computation and communication. Finally, in order to
illustrate the effectiveness of our approach, we introduce some experimental
results we have obtained from preliminary implementations of (parts of) that
subsystem.Comment: Proceedings of the 7th International wireless Communications and
Mobile Computing conference (IWCMC-2011), Emergency Management: Communication
and Computing Platforms Worksho
An opportunistic indoors positioning scheme based on estimated positions
The localization requirements for mobile nodes in wireless (sensor) networks are increasing. However, most research works are based on range measurements between nodes which are often oversensitive to the measurement error. In this paper we propose a location estimation scheme based on moving nodes that opportunistically exchange known positions. The user couples a linear matrix inequality (LMI) method with a barycenter computation to estimate its position. Simulations have shown that the accuracy of the estimation increases when the number of known positions increases, the radio range decreases and the node speeds increase. The proposed method only depends on a maximum RSS threshold to take into account a known position, which makes it robust and easy to implement. To obtain an accuracy of 1 meter, a user may have to wait at the same position for 5 minutes, with 8 pedestrians moving within range on average
Multiuser Switched Diversity Scheduling Schemes
Multiuser switched-diversity scheduling schemes were recently proposed in
order to overcome the heavy feedback requirements of conventional opportunistic
scheduling schemes by applying a threshold-based, distributed, and ordered
scheduling mechanism. The main idea behind these schemes is that slight
reduction in the prospected multiuser diversity gains is an acceptable
trade-off for great savings in terms of required channel-state-information
feedback messages. In this work, we characterize the achievable rate region of
multiuser switched diversity systems and compare it with the rate region of
full feedback multiuser diversity systems. We propose also a novel proportional
fair multiuser switched-based scheduling scheme and we demonstrate that it can
be optimized using a practical and distributed method to obtain the feedback
thresholds. We finally demonstrate by numerical examples that
switched-diversity scheduling schemes operate within 0.3 bits/sec/Hz from the
ultimate network capacity of full feedback systems in Rayleigh fading
conditions.Comment: Accepted at IEEE Transactions on Communications, to appear 2012,
funded by NPRP grant 08-577-2-241 from QNR
A Framework for Uplink Intercell Interference Modeling with Channel-Based Scheduling
This paper presents a novel framework for modeling the uplink intercell
interference (ICI) in a multiuser cellular network. The proposed framework
assists in quantifying the impact of various fading channel models and
state-of-the-art scheduling schemes on the uplink ICI. Firstly, we derive a
semianalytical expression for the distribution of the location of the scheduled
user in a given cell considering a wide range of scheduling schemes. Based on
this, we derive the distribution and moment generating function (MGF) of the
uplink ICI considering a single interfering cell. Consequently, we determine
the MGF of the cumulative ICI observed from all interfering cells and derive
explicit MGF expressions for three typical fading models. Finally, we utilize
the obtained expressions to evaluate important network performance metrics such
as the outage probability, ergodic capacity, and average fairness numerically.
Monte-Carlo simulation results are provided to demonstrate the efficacy of the
derived analytical expressions.Comment: IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications, 2013. arXiv admin note:
substantial text overlap with arXiv:1206.229
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