3,507 research outputs found
Compressive Sensing for Spread Spectrum Receivers
With the advent of ubiquitous computing there are two design parameters of
wireless communication devices that become very important power: efficiency and
production cost. Compressive sensing enables the receiver in such devices to
sample below the Shannon-Nyquist sampling rate, which may lead to a decrease in
the two design parameters. This paper investigates the use of Compressive
Sensing (CS) in a general Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) receiver. We
show that when using spread spectrum codes in the signal domain, the CS
measurement matrix may be simplified. This measurement scheme, named
Compressive Spread Spectrum (CSS), allows for a simple, effective receiver
design. Furthermore, we numerically evaluate the proposed receiver in terms of
bit error rate under different signal to noise ratio conditions and compare it
with other receiver structures. These numerical experiments show that though
the bit error rate performance is degraded by the subsampling in the CS-enabled
receivers, this may be remedied by including quantization in the receiver
model. We also study the computational complexity of the proposed receiver
design under different sparsity and measurement ratios. Our work shows that it
is possible to subsample a CDMA signal using CSS and that in one example the
CSS receiver outperforms the classical receiver.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in IEEE
Transactions on Wireless Communication
Scalable Model-Based Management of Correlated Dimensional Time Series in ModelarDB+
To monitor critical infrastructure, high quality sensors sampled at a high
frequency are increasingly used. However, as they produce huge amounts of data,
only simple aggregates are stored. This removes outliers and fluctuations that
could indicate problems. As a remedy, we present a model-based approach for
managing time series with dimensions that exploits correlation in and among
time series. Specifically, we propose compressing groups of correlated time
series using an extensible set of model types within a user-defined error bound
(possibly zero). We name this new category of model-based compression methods
for time series Multi-Model Group Compression (MMGC). We present the first MMGC
method GOLEMM and extend model types to compress time series groups. We propose
primitives for users to effectively define groups for differently sized data
sets, and based on these, an automated grouping method using only the time
series dimensions. We propose algorithms for executing simple and
multi-dimensional aggregate queries on models. Last, we implement our methods
in the Time Series Management System (TSMS) ModelarDB (ModelarDB+). Our
evaluation shows that compared to widely used formats, ModelarDB+ provides up
to 13.7 times faster ingestion due to high compression, 113 times better
compression due to the adaptivity of GOLEMM, 630 times faster aggregates by
using models, and close to linear scalability. It is also extensible and
supports online query processing.Comment: 12 Pages, 28 Figures, and 1 Tabl
The Map is the Territory - Cartographies, Categories and Categorizers in the Danish user driven innovation programs
Witnessing the Future
The paper explores the phenomenon of witnessing the future through a case study of how a Scandinavian new economy firm managed to persuade a number of business journalists that it was "the future". It describes the procedures and rhetorical strategies that the manager deployed to turn the journalists into witnesses. It compares the manager's strategy to other cases of effective witnessing in courtrooms and in science. It concludes that the manager's persuasiveness is derived from his ability to articulate a series of pointed contrasts between the attractive working life within the firm and the problematic work life elsewhere. Finally, it notes that the manager's strategy enacts a time-world characterised by dramatic epochal changes, which is radically different from the more stable and knowable time-world that is enacted in ordinary scientific discourses.
URN: urn:nbn:de:0114-fqs07011
Generic variation?:Developments in use of generic pronouns in late 20<sup>th</sup> century spoken Danish
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