134 research outputs found

    WIDAR: bistatic WI-fi Detection And Ranging for off-the-shelf devices

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    The huge spread of wireless networks and the success of location-aware applications require novel indoor po- sitioning mechanisms based on existing technologies such as IEEE 802.11. Taking inspiration from the RADAR, we propose WIDAR: a bistatic WI-fi Detection And Ranging system for off- the-shelf devices. WIDAR implementation is based on the USRP2 platform and is able to locate 802.11 stations while they operate in existing legacy networks. No substitution or repositioning of the Access Points is necessary. WIDAR works passively and does not expect any dedicated action from the target WiFi node. No airtime is wasted and the target cannot even detect that it is being ranged. Such features make WIDAR desirable in surveillance and monitoring applications where it can provide real-time tracking functionalities

    Analysis of MAC-level throughput in LTE systems with link rate adaptation and HARQ protocols

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    LTE is rapidly gaining momentum for building future 4G cellular systems, and real operational networks are under deployment worldwide. To achieve high throughput performance, in addition to an advanced physical layer design LTE exploits a combination of sophisticated mechanisms at the radio resource management layer. Clearly, this makes difficult to develop analytical tools to accurately assess and optimise the user perceived throughput under realistic channel assumptions. Thus, most existing studies focus only on link-layer throughput or consider individual mechanisms in isolation. The main contribution of this paper is a unified modelling framework of the MAC-level downlink throughput of a sigle LTE cell, which caters for wideband CQI feedback schemes, AMC and HARQ protocols as defined in the LTE standard. We have validated the accuracy of the proposed model through detailed LTE simulations carried out with the ns-3 simulator extended with the LENA module for LTE

    Recupero e riqualificazione delle aree produttive in provincia di Treviso

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    Recovery and Regeneration of Industrial Areas in the Treviso Province. In the future the reducing necessity of industrial areas and the demand for a sustainable urban management - soil use - make more urgent the challenge of recovery and regeneration of industrial areas in the province of Treviso, largely abandoned today and subject to ineffective urban and regional planning models. A decision tool has been performed in order to manage political interventions by classifying industrial areas in: suitable to expansion, not suitable to expansion and to recovery. For each of these classes urban design addresses have been commented in a perspective of environmental sustainability

    SDR-LoRa, an open-source, full-fledged implementation of LoRa on Software-Defined-Radios: Design and potential exploitation

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    In this paper, we present SDR-LoRa, an open-source, full-fledged Software Defined Radio (SDR) implementation of a LoRa transceiver. First, we conduct a thorough analysis of the LoRa physical layer (PHY) functionalities, encompassing processes such as packet modulation, demodulation, and preamble detection. Then, we leverage on this analysis to create a pioneering SDR-based LoRa PHY implementation. Accordingly, we thoroughly describe all the implementation details. Moreover, we illustrate how SDR-LoRa can help boost research on the LoRa protocol by presenting three exemplary key applications that can be built on top of our implementation, namely fine-grained localization, interference cancellation, and enhanced link reliability. To validate SDR-LoRa and its applications, we test it on two different platforms: (i) a physical setup involving USRP radios and off-the-shelf commercial devices, and (ii) the Colosseum wireless channel emulator. Our experimental findings reveal that (i) SDR-LoRa performs comparably to conventional commercial LoRa systems, and (ii) all the aforementioned applications can be successfully implemented on top of SDR-LoRa with remarkable results. The complete details of the SDR-LoRa implementation code have been publicly shared online, together with a plug-and-play Colosseum container

    Transfer Entropy Analysis of Pulse Arrival Time - Heart Period Interactions during Physiological Stress

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    Although Heart Period (HP) variability is the most widely used measure to assess cardiovascular oscillations, its evaluation combined with that of Pulse Arrival Time (PAT) variability may provide additional information about cardiac dynamics and cardiovascular interactions. In this study, we computed the transfer entropy from PAT to HP in 76 subjects monitored at rest and during orthostatic and mental stress using both a model-free (k- Nearest Neighbors) and a linear parametric estimator. Our results show how the information flow between these two variables depends on the physiological condition and how the nonlinear measure captures more information than the linear one during orthostatic stress

    Visuo-spatial attention and reading abilities: an action game prototype for dyslexic children

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    The ability to play action videogames – not directly related to phonological or orthographic training – seems to be a teaching tool able to intervene specifically on spatial attention and drastically improve the reading skills of dyslexic children. The MADRIGALE project aims at the design and development of an action game, simultaneously involving both phonological and attention training in order to adapt educational game strategies for special needs. Within the MADRIGALE project, the design of the prototype was presented at the International Conference on Intelligent Networking and Collaborative Systems, while an experimentation about educational effectiveness of the prototype, conducted using ‘Prove MT2’ as a benchmarking tool for measuring accuracy and speed of reading, was published in the International Journal of Emerging Technologies in Learning (iJET). This paper is an extension of the work presented in SIREM – SIEL 2014 Conference, and presents the results of a Game Evaluation Sheet administered to 50 primary school teachers with experience of dyslexic student

    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

    El espacio empático en la educación: representación del espacio y empatía, de Piaget a la didáctica de la “simplicidad”

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    Este trabajo quiere ofrecer un punto de vista sobre la relación entre el espacio y la didáctica, partiendo de la hipótesis, desarrollada por Alain Berthoz, de que los numerosos problemas planteados por el avance en el espacio han sido utilizados en el curso de la evolución, incluso para las funciones cognitiva superiores. La investigación en neurociencias, de hecho, identificó las bases neurobiológicas de las intuiciones de Piaget sobre la representación del espacio en el niño y puso de manifiesto los vínculos entre la capacidad de gestión de los sistemas de referencia espacial, la capacidad de rotación mental y la modalidad empática de relación intersubjetiva. El trabajo se desarrolla presentando un marco funcional de la idea de espacio en el pensamiento occidental y de la relación entre la manipulación de los sistemas de referencia espacial y los procesos cognitivos. Para concluir se analizan las consecuencias , en el ámbito educativo, de la teoría espacial de la empatía, desarrollada en el Collège de France, en la estela de la tradición fenomenológica
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