4 research outputs found

    Performance Trade-off Investigation of B-IFDMA

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    A performance trade-off investigation is carried out between different possible uplink multiple access schemes, that are based on Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM), for International Mobile Telecommunication (IMT) Advanced systems. Between the Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT) precoded systems with different subcarrier allocation mappings and systems lacking DFT-precoders, Block Interleaved Frequency Division Multiple Access (B-IFDMA) is shown to provide a good trade-off between the frequency diversity collected, envelope properties achieved, and channel estimation performance compared to the other mapping schemes. The schemes are analyzed in the presence of the different possible modules which include equalizers, modulators, interleavers, and channel codes. In particular, robust codes such as Turbo codes are able to collect the diversity provided by such schemes, and B-IFDMA systems is shown to be able to beat the other systems in bit error rate (BER) performance terms

    LAPRA: Location-aware Proactive Resource Allocation

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    Today’s indoor wireless networks employ reactive resource allocation methods to provide fair and efficient usage of the communication system. However, their reactive nature limits the quality of service (QoS) that can be offered to the user locations within the environment. In large crowded areas (airports, conferences), networks can get congested and users may suffer from poor QoS. To mitigate this, we propose and evaluate a location-aware user-centric proactive resource allocation approach (LAPRA), in which the users are proactive and seek good channel quality by moving to locations where the signal quality is good. As a result, the users and their locations are optimized to improve the overall QoS. We demonstrate that the proposed proactive approach enhances the user QoS and improves network throughput of the system

    On the Trade-off Between Accuracy and Delay in Cooperative UWB Navigation

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    In ultra-wide bandwidth (UWB) cooperative navigation, nodes estimate their position by means of shared information. Such sharing has a direct impact on the position accuracy and medium access control (MAC) delay, which needs to be considered when designing UWB navigation systems. We investigate the interplay between UWB position accuracy and MAC delay for cooperative scenarios. We quantify this relation through fundamental lower bounds on position accuracy and MAC delay for arbitrary finite networks. Results show that the traditional ways to increase accuracy (e.g., increasing the number of anchors or the transmission power) as well as inter-node cooperation may lead to large MAC delays. We evaluate one method to mitigate these delays

    On the Trade-Off Between Accuracy and Delay in Cooperative UWB Localization: Performance Bounds and Scaling Laws

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    Ultra-wide bandwidth (UWB) systems allow for accurate positioning in environments where global navigation satellite systems may fail, especially when complemented with cooperative processing. While cooperative UWB has led to centimeter-level accuracies, the communication overhead is often neglected. We quantify how accuracy and delay trade off in a wide variety of operation conditions. We also derive the asymptotic scaling of accuracy and delay, indicating that, in some conditions, standard cooperation offers the worst possible tradeoff. Both avenues lead to the same conclusion: indiscriminately targeting increased accuracy incurs a significant delay penalty. Simple countermeasures can be taken to reduce this penalty and obtain a meaningful accuracy/delay trade-off
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