52 research outputs found
Alaska Natives and American Laws
In this thesis we focus on the issue of crowdfunding and especially how a project relates to and embraces its community. While a lot of related research focus on what makes people give, our research instead delve into whether a creator looks upon the sponsors as something more than just a financial resource. To manage this task we used a triangular perspective consisting of a case study, a questionnaire and a netnographic study. The goal was to gain the perspectives of creators, crowdfunding platforms and sponsors on how the communication between the community and the project works and can be improved. Â Â Â Â The three crowdfunding platforms we reviewed (Kickstarter, IndieGoGo, Rockethub) all had fairly similar models on how to attract sponsors and make them involved in the project, while the questionnaire and netnographic study demonstrated how a community could contribute in different ways. Based on our results we draw the conclusion that a project can be successful without embracing the creative qualities of its sponsors but doing so also is a waste of a great asset to both current and future projects.
On Frame Asynchronous Coded Slotted ALOHA: Asymptotic, Finite Length, and Delay Analysis
We consider a frame asynchronous coded slotted ALOHA (FA-CSA) system for
uncoordinated multiple access, where users join the system on a slot-by-slot
basis according to a Poisson random process and, in contrast to standard frame
synchronous CSA (FS-CSA), users are not frame-synchronized. We analyze the
performance of FA-CSA in terms of packet loss rate and delay. In particular, we
derive the (approximate) density evolution that characterizes the asymptotic
performance of FA-CSA when the frame length goes to infinity. We show that, if
the receiver can monitor the system before anyone starts transmitting, a
boundary effect similar to that of spatially-coupled codes occurs, which
greatly improves the iterative decoding threshold. Furthermore, we derive tight
approximations of the error floor (EF) for the finite frame length regime,
based on the probability of occurrence of the most frequent stopping sets. We
show that, in general, FA-CSA provides better performance in both the EF and
waterfall regions as compared to FS-CSA. Moreover, FA-CSA exhibits better delay
properties than FS-CSA.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figures. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
arXiv:1604.0629
On Channel Estimation for 802.11p in Highly Time-Varying Vehicular Channels
Vehicular wireless channels are highly time-varying and the pilot pattern in
the 802.11p orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing frame has been shown to
be ill suited for long data packets. The high frame error rate in off-the-shelf
chipsets with noniterative receiver configurations is mostly due to the use of
outdated channel estimates for equalization. This paper deals with improving
the channel estimation in 802.11p systems using a cross layered approach, where
known data bits are inserted in the higher layers and a modified receiver makes
use of these bits as training data for improved channel estimation. We also
describe a noniterative receiver configuration for utilizing the additional
training bits and show through simulations that frame error rates close to the
case with perfect channel knowledge can be achieved.Comment: 6 pages, 11 figures, conferenc
Asymptotic and Finite Frame Length Analysis of Frame Asynchronous Coded Slotted ALOHA
We consider a frame-asynchronous coded slotted ALOHA (FA-CSA) system where
users become active according to a Poisson random process. In contrast to
standard frame-synchronous CSA (FS-CSA), users transmit a first replica of
their message in the slot following their activation and other replicas
uniformly at random in a number of subsequent slots. We derive the
(approximate) density evolution that characterizes the asymptotic performance
of FA-CSA when the frame length goes to infinity. We show that, if users can
monitor the system before they start transmitting, a boundary-effect similar to
that of spatially-coupled codes occurs, which greatly improves the decoding
threshold as compared to FS-CSA. We also derive analytical approximations of
the error floor (EF) in the finite frame length regime. We show that FA-CSA
yields in general lower EF, better performance in the waterfall region, and
lower average delay, as compared to FS-CSA.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures. Updated notation, terminology, and typo
General BER Expression for One-Dimensional Constellations
A novel general ready-to-use bit-error rate (BER) expression for
one-dimensional constellations is developed. The BER analysis is performed for
bit patterns that form a labeling. The number of patterns for equally spaced
M-PAM constellations with different BER is analyzed.Comment: To appear in the Proceedings of the IEEE Global Communications
Conference (GLOBECOM) 2012. Remark 3 modifie
A Simple Approximation for the Bit-Interleaved Coded Modulation Capacity
The generalized mutual information (GMI) is an achievable rate for bit-interleaved coded modulation (BICM) and is highly dependent on the binary labeling of the constellation. The BICM-GMI, sometimes called the BICM capacity, can be evaluated numerically. This approach, however, becomes impractical when the number of constellation points and/or the constellation dimensionality grows, or when many different labelings are considered. A simple approximation for the BICM-GMI based on the area theorem of the demapper's extrinsic information transfer (EXIT) function is proposed. Numerical results show the proposed approximation gives good estimates of the BICM-GMI for labelings with close to linear EXIT functions, which includes labelings of common interest, such as the natural binary code, binary reflected Gray code, etc. This approximation is used to optimize the binary labeling of the 32-APSK constellation defined in the DVB-S2 standard. Gains of approximately 0.15 dB are obtained
Optimized Bit Mappings for Spatially Coupled LDPC Codes over Parallel Binary Erasure Channels
In many practical communication systems, one binary encoder/decoder pair is
used to communicate over a set of parallel channels. Examples of this setup
include multi-carrier transmission, rate-compatible puncturing of turbo-like
codes, and bit-interleaved coded modulation (BICM). A bit mapper is commonly
employed to determine how the coded bits are allocated to the channels. In this
paper, we study spatially coupled low-density parity check codes over parallel
channels and optimize the bit mapper using BICM as the driving example. For
simplicity, the parallel bit channels that arise in BICM are replaced by
independent binary erasure channels (BECs). For two parallel BECs modeled
according to a 4-PAM constellation labeled by the binary reflected Gray code,
the optimization results show that the decoding threshold can be improved over
a uniform random bit mapper, or, alternatively, the spatial chain length of the
code can be reduced for a given gap to capacity. It is also shown that for
rate-loss free, circular (tail-biting) ensembles, a decoding wave effect can be
initiated using only an optimized bit mapper
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