5 research outputs found

    Advanced Modulations of Optical Interconnections for Mega-Datacenters

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    Agile wireless transmission strategies

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    Symbol error rate comparisons of star MQAM schemes based on equal cubic metric

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    Recent Advances in Wireless Communications and Networks

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    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

    Computational Intelligence for Cooperative Swarm Control

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    Over the last few decades, swarm intelligence (SI) has shown significant benefits in many practical applications. Real-world applications of swarm intelligence include disaster response and wildlife conservation. Swarm robots can collaborate to search for survivors, locate victims, and assess damage in hazardous environments during an earthquake or natural disaster. They can coordinate their movements and share data in real-time to increase their efficiency and effectiveness while guiding the survivors. In addition to tracking animal movements and behaviour, robots can guide animals to or away from specific areas. Sheep herding is a significant source of income in Australia that could be significantly enhanced if the human shepherd could be supported by single or multiple robots. Although the shepherding framework has become a popular SI mechanism, where a leading agent (sheepdog) controls a swarm of agents (sheep) to complete a task, controlling a swarm of agents is still not a trivial task, especially in the presence of some practical constraints. For example, most of the existing shepherding literature assumes that each swarm member has an unlimited sensing range to recognise all other members’ locations. However, this is not practical for physical systems. In addition, current approaches do not consider shepherding as a distributed system where an agent, namely a central unit, may observe the environment and commu- nicate with the shepherd to guide the swarm. However, this brings another hurdle when noisy communication channels between the central unit and the shepherd af- fect the success of the mission. Also, the literature lacks shepherding models that can cope with dynamic communication systems. Therefore, this thesis aims to design a multi-agent learning system for effective shepherding control systems in a partially observable environment under communication constraints. To achieve this goal, the thesis first introduces a new methodology to guide agents whose sensing range is limited. In this thesis, the sheep are modelled as an induced network to represent the sheep’s sensing range and propose a geometric method for finding a shepherd-impacted subset of sheep. The proposed swarm optimal herding point uses a particle swarm optimiser and a clustering mechanism to find the sheepdog’s near-optimal herding location while considering flock cohesion. Then, an improved version of the algorithm (named swarm optimal modified centroid push) is proposed to estimate the sheepdog’s intermediate waypoints to the herding point considering the sheep cohesion. The approaches outperform existing shepherding methods in reducing task time and increasing the success rate for herding. Next, to improve shepherding in noisy communication channels, this thesis pro- poses a collaborative learning-based method to enhance communication between the central unit and the herding agent. The proposed independent pre-training collab- orative learning technique decreases the transmission mean square error by half in 10% of the training time compared to existing approaches. The algorithm is then ex- tended so that the sheepdog can read the modulated herding points from the central unit. The results demonstrate the efficiency of the new technique in time-varying noisy channels. Finally, the central unit is modelled as a mobile agent to lower the time-varying noise caused by the sheepdog’s motion during the task. So, I propose a Q-learning- based incremental search to increase transmission success between the shepherd and the central unit. In addition, two unique reward functions are presented to ensure swarm guidance success with minimal energy consumption. The results demonstrate an increase in the success rate for shepherding
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