54 research outputs found

    Error mitigation using RaptorQ codes in an experimental indoor free space optical link under the influence of turbulence

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    This paper is a postprint of a paper submitted to and accepted for publication in [journal] and is subject to Institution of Engineering and Technology Copyright. The copy of record is available at IET Digital LibraryIn free space optical (FSO) communications, several factors can strongly affect the link quality. Among them, one of the most important impairments that can degrade the FSO link quality and its reliability even under the clear sky conditions consists of optical turbulence. In this work, the authors investigate the generation of both weak and moderate turbulence regimes in an indoor environment to assess the FSO link quality. In particular, they show that, due to the presence of the turbulence, the link experiences both erasure errors and packet losses during transmission, and also compare the experimental statistical distribution of samples with the predicted Gamma Gamma model. Furthermore, the authors demonstrate that the application of the RaptorQ codes noticeably improves the link quality decreasing the packet error rate (PER) by about an order of magnitude, also offering in certain cases an error-free transmission with a PER of ∼10−2 at Rytov variance value of 0.5. The results show that the recovery rate increases with the redundancy, the packet length and the number of source packets, and it decreases with increasing data rates.This work was supported by the European Space Agency under grant no. 5401001020. We are very grateful to Dr. E. Armandillo for enlightening discussions. This research project also falls within the frame of COST ICT Action IC1101 - Optical Wireless Communications - An Emerging Technology (OPTICWISE). J. Perez's work is supported by Spanish MINECO Juan de la Cierva JCI-2012-14805.Pernice, R.; Parisi, A.; Ando, A.; Mangione, S.; Garbo, G.; Busacca, AC.; Perez, J.... (2015). Error mitigation using RaptorQ codes in an experimental indoor free space optical link under the influence of turbulence. IET Communications. 9(14):1800-1806. https://doi.org/10.1049/iet-com.2015.0235S18001806914Tsukamoto, K., Hashimoto, A., Aburakawa, Y., & Matsumoto, M. (2009). The case for free space. IEEE Microwave Magazine, 10(5), 84-92. doi:10.1109/mmm.2009.933086Paraskevopoulos, A., Vučić, J., Voss, S.-H., Swoboda, R., & Langer, K.-D. (2010). Optical Wireless Communication Systems in the Mb/s to Gb/s Range, Suitable for Industrial Applications. IEEE/ASME Transactions on Mechatronics, 15(4), 541-547. doi:10.1109/tmech.2010.2051814Ghassemlooy, Z., Le Minh, H., Rajbhandari, S., Perez, J., & Ijaz, M. (2012). Performance Analysis of Ethernet/Fast-Ethernet Free Space Optical Communications in a Controlled Weak Turbulence Condition. Journal of Lightwave Technology, 30(13), 2188-2194. doi:10.1109/jlt.2012.2194271Ciaramella, E., Arimoto, Y., Contestabile, G., Presi, M., D’Errico, A., Guarino, V., & Matsumoto, M. (2009). 1.28-Tb/s (32 ×\times 40 Gb/s) Free-Space Optical WDM Transmission System. IEEE Photonics Technology Letters, 21(16), 1121-1123. doi:10.1109/lpt.2009.2021149Parca, G. (2013). Optical wireless transmission at 1.6-Tbit/s (16×100  Gbit/s) for next-generation convergent urban infrastructures. Optical Engineering, 52(11), 116102. doi:10.1117/1.oe.52.11.116102Hulea, M., Ghassemlooy, Z., Rajbhandari, S., & Tang, X. (2014). Compensating for Optical Beam Scattering and Wandering in FSO Communications. Journal of Lightwave Technology, 32(7), 1323-1328. doi:10.1109/jlt.2014.2304182Ghassemlooy, Z., Popoola, W. O., Ahmadi, V., & Leitgeb, E. (2009). MIMO Free-Space Optical Communication Employing Subcarrier Intensity Modulation in Atmospheric Turbulence Channels. Communications Infrastructure. Systems and Applications in Europe, 61-73. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-11284-3_7Garcia-Zambrana, A. (2007). Error rate performance for STBC in free-space optical communications through strong atmospheric turbulence. IEEE Communications Letters, 11(5), 390-392. doi:10.1109/lcomm.2007.061980Abou-Rjeily, C. (2011). On the Optimality of the Selection Transmit Diversity for MIMO-FSO Links with Feedback. IEEE Communications Letters, 15(6), 641-643. doi:10.1109/lcomm.2011.041411.110312García-Zambrana, A., Castillo-Vázquez, C., & Castillo-Vázquez, B. (2010). Rate-adaptive FSO links over atmospheric turbulence channels by jointly using repetition coding and silence periods. Optics Express, 18(24), 25422. doi:10.1364/oe.18.025422Andò, A., Mangione, S., Curcio, L., Stivala, S., Garbo, G., Pernice, R., & Busacca, A. C. (2013). Recovery Capabilities of Rateless Codes on Simulated Turbulent Terrestrial Free Space Optics Channel Model. International Journal of Antennas and Propagation, 2013, 1-8. doi:10.1155/2013/692915MacKay, D. J. C. (2005). Fountain codes. IEE Proceedings - Communications, 152(6), 1062. doi:10.1049/ip-com:20050237Shokrollahi, A. (2006). Raptor codes. IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, 52(6), 2551-2567. doi:10.1109/tit.2006.874390Anguita, J. A., Neifeld, M. A., Hildner, B., & Vasic, B. (2010). Rateless Coding on Experimental Temporally Correlated FSO Channels. Journal of Lightwave Technology, 28(7), 990-1002. doi:10.1109/jlt.2010.2040136Wang, N., & Cheng, J. (2010). Moment-based estimation for the shape parameters of the Gamma-Gamma atmospheric turbulence model. Optics Express, 18(12), 12824. doi:10.1364/oe.18.012824Zvanovec, S., Perez, J., Ghassemlooy, Z., Rajbhandari, S., & Libich, J. (2013). Route diversity analyses for free-space optical wireless links within turbulent scenarios. Optics Express, 21(6), 7641. doi:10.1364/oe.21.007641Pernice, R., Perez, J., Ghassemlooy, Z., Stivala, S., Cardinale, M., Curcio, L., … Parisi, A. (2015). Indoor free space optics link under the weak turbulence regime: measurements and model validation. IET Communications, 9(1), 62-70. doi:10.1049/iet-com.2014.043

    Applications of Ketogenic Diets in Patients with Headache: Clinical Recommendations

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    Headaches are among the most prevalent and disabling neurologic disorders and there are several unmet needs as current pharmacological options are inadequate in treating patients with chronic headache, and a growing interest focuses on nutritional approaches as non-pharmacological treatments. Among these, the largest body of evidence supports the use of the ketogenic diet (KD). Exactly 100 years ago, KD was first used to treat drug-resistant epilepsy, but subsequent applications of this diet also involved other neurological disorders. Evidence of KD effectiveness in migraine emerged in 1928, but in the last several year's different groups of researchers and clinicians began utilizing this therapeutic option to treat patients with drug-resistant migraine, cluster headache, and/or headache comorbid with metabolic syndrome. Here we describe the existing evidence supporting the potential benefits of KDs in the management of headaches, explore the potential mechanisms of action involved in the efficacy in-depth, and synthesize results of working meetings of an Italian panel of experts on this topic. The aim of the working group was to create a clinical recommendation on indications and optimal clinical practice to treat patients with headaches using KDs. The results we present here are designed to advance the knowledge and application of KDs in the treatment of headaches

    A Qualitative Exploration of the Use of Contraband Cell Phones in Secured Facilities

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    Offenders accepting contraband cell phones in secured facilities violate state corrections law, and the possession of these cell phones is a form of risk taking behavior. When offenders continue this risky behavior, it affects their decision making in other domains where they are challenging authorities; and may impact the length of their incarceration. This qualitative phenomenological study examined the lived experience of ex-offenders who had contraband cell phones in secured correctional facilities in order to better understand their reasons for taking risks with contraband cell phones. The theoretical foundation for this study was Trimpop\u27s risk-homeostasis and risk-motivation theories that suggest an individual\u27s behaviors adapt to negotiate between perceived risk and desired risk in order to achieve satisfaction. The research question explored beliefs and perceptions of ex-offenders who chose to accept the risk of using contraband cell phones during their time in secured facilities. Data were collected anonymously through recorded telephone interviews with 8 male adult ex-offenders and analyzed using thematic content analysis. Findings indicated participants felt empowered by possession of cell phones in prison, and it was an acceptable risk to stay connected to family out of concern for loved ones. The study contributes to social change by providing those justice system administrators, and prison managers responsible for prison cell phone policies with more detailed information about the motivations and perspectives of offenders in respect to using contraband cell phones while imprisoned in secured facilities

    An Improved Detection Technique for Cyclic-Prefixed OFDM

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    A novel Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing detection technique compatible to standard (e.g. Wireless LAN) transmitters is proposed. It features enhanced error-rate performance with flexible computational complexity and robustness to imperfect channel estimation. It is based on exploitation of the redundancy available in the cyclic prefix after cancellation of interference from the preceding block. In order to show the effectiveness of our proposal, an analysis of computational complexity and a number of comparisons to the standard per-subcarrier receiver and a previously existing method in terms of error rates are reported

    An OFDM Receiver Exploiting Multipath Diversity

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    An Improved Receiver Architecture for Cyclic-Prefixed OFDM

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    A novel Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing receiver architecture to be employed with standard (e.g. Wireless LAN) transmitters is proposed. It features enhanced error-rate performance with flexible computational complexity and robustness to imperfect channel estimation. It is based on exploitation of the redundancy available in the cyclic prefix after cancellation of interference from the previous block. In order to show the effectiveness of our proposal, a number of comparisons to the standard per-subcarrier receiver and a previously existing method are reported

    An Improved Detection Technique for Cyclic-Prefixed OFDM

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    Orthogonal Multicarrier Transmission with Modal Channel Estimation

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    A novel multi-carrier orthogonal transmission scheme is presented. While being simpler to implement, it has a spectral efficiency and design parameters similar to those of Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing based on Offset Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (OFDM/OQAM). A parametric channel estimation technique is subsequently reported. The proposed technique is based on an algorithm obtained from classic Multiple Signal Classification (MUSIC) by relaxation of the hypothesis on the number of measurements with respect to the number of sensors. Numerical simulations show that our proposal outperforms previous works in this field

    Efficient Simulation of Orthogonal Multicarrier Transmission over Multipath Fading Channels

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    Filterbank orthogonal multicarrier transmission schemes, such as OFDM/OQAM, are currently under intense study for their spectral efficiency and suitability for the physical layer of Cognitive Radio. Nonetheless, the mathematical description of the signal is cumbersome, and closed form expressions for performance figures are not available, so performance analysis on fading channels has to be performed by means of simulations. We propose an algorithm for simulating the received signal over multipath frequency selective fading channels, based on Taylor series expansion of the channel transfer function. The proposed method is compared to the state-of-the-art FFT-based method in terms of computational complexity
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