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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
41

Smart packet access and call admission control for efficient resource management in advanced wireless networks

Phan, V. V. (Vinh V.) 12 April 2005 (has links)
Abstract Efficient management of rather limited resources, including radio spectrum and mobile-terminal battery power, has been the fundamental design challenge of wireless networks and one of the most widespread research problems over the years. MAC (Medium Access Control) for packet access and CAC (Call Admission Control) for connection-oriented service domains are commonly used as effective tools to manage radio resources, capacity and performance of wireless networks while providing adequate QoS (Quality of Service) to mobile users. Hence, analysis and synthesis of efficient MAC and CAC schemes for advanced wireless networks have significant academic and practical values. This dissertation addresses that topic and presents seven separate contributions of the author: four on adaptive MAC schemes for centralized PRN (Packet Radio Networks), referred to as SPA (Smart Packet Access) and three on CAC schemes for cellular networks, referred to as SCA (Smart Call Admission). These contributions are published in eighteen original papers by the author, which are listed and referred to as Papers I–XVIII in this thesis. In SPA, the first contribution, reported in Papers II and IV, studies implementation losses of adaptive feedback-control MAC schemes for the uplink of DS-CDMA (Direct-Sequence Code Division Multiple Access) PRN in the presence of various system imperfections. The second contribution, reported in Papers XI, XII, XV and XVI, proposes a bit-rate adaptive MAC scheme for DS-CDMA PRN, referred to as SPR (Smart Packet Rate). The third contribution, reported in Papers III, XIII and XIV, develops two alternative MAC schemes with adaptive packet-length over correlated fading channels in DS-CDMA PRN, referred to as SPL (Smart Packet Length). The fourth contribution, reported in Papers XVII and XVIII, develops alternative adaptive MAC schemes for optimal trade-offs between throughput and energy consumption of TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) applications in advanced cellular networks. These include a so-called SPD (Smart Packet Dispatching) for HSPA (High Speed Packet Access) and, again, SPL for LSPA (Low Speed Packet Access). Moving on to SCA, the first contribution, reported in Papers V and VII, provides a simple and accurate analytical method for performance evaluation of a class of fixed-assignment CAC schemes with generic guard-channel policy and queuing priority handoffs in cellular networks. The second contribution, reported in Papers VI, IX and X, proposes a simple and effective SCAC (Soft-decision CAC) scheme for CDMA cellular networks. This is evaluated against fixed-assignment and measurement-based CAC schemes with a simple and reliable method provided as a part of the contribution. The third contribution, reported in Papers I and VIII, incorporates alternative QoS differentiation paradigms and resource partitioning into CAC, defines GoS (Grade of Service) for multimedia cellular networks, and provides an in-hand tool for efficient capacity and GoS management.
42

Multi-Cell Admission Control for WCDMA Networks

Azzolin de Carvalho Pires, Gustavo January 2006 (has links)
It has long been recognized that in multi-cell WCDMA networks the admission of a new session into the system can have undesirable impact on the neighboring cells. Although admission control algorithms that take into account such multi-cell impact have been studied in the past, little attention has been paid to multi-cell admission and rate control algorithms when traffic is elastic. In this thesis, we propose a model for multi-cell multi-service WCDMA networks to study the impact of multi-cell admission and rate control algorithms on key performance measures such as the class-wise blocking and outage probabilities, block error rates, and the noise rise violation probabilities. By means of simulation we compare the performance of load based multi-cell algorithms with that of a single cell algorithm. We find that with multi-cell based algorithms the system capacity and performance (in terms of the above mentioned measures) are (in some cases significantly) better in homogeneous load scenarios as well as in the heterogeneous ’hotspot’ and ’hotaround’ scenarios. / Det har länge varit känt att i multi-cellulära WCDMA nät så kan insläppandet av en ny användarei systemet ha en icke önskvärd effekt på intilliggande celler. Fastän insläppskontrollalgoritmer (AC)som tar hänsyn till sådana multi-cellulära effekter har studerats tidigare, så har endast begränsaduppmärksamhet ägnatsåt multi-cellulär insläpps- och bittaktskontrollalgoritmer när trafiken är elastisk.I detta arbete föreslår vi en modell för WCDMA-nät med multipla celler och multipla tjänster ochsom är applicerbar för studier av av hur multi-cellulär insläpps- och bittaktskontroll inverkar påviktiga prestandamått som klassvisa spärr- och utslagningssannolikheter, blockfelssannolikheter, ochsannolikheten för överträdande av tillåten interferensnivå. Med simuleringar jämför vi prestanda förlastbaserade multi-cellalgoritmer med prestanda för singel-cellalgoritmer. Vi har funnit att med multicellalgoritmerså är systemskapacitetet och prestanda (i termer av tidigare nämnda mått) i några fallbetydligt bättre i homogena lastscenarier, samt i heterogena lastscenarier av typerna ’hotspot’ och’hotround’.
43

An adaptive connection admission control algorithm for UMTS based satellite system with variable capacity supporting multimedia services

Pillai, Anju, Hu, Yim Fun, Halliwell, Rosemary A. January 2013 (has links)
no / This paper is focused on the design of an adaptive Connection Admission Control (CAC) algorithm for a Universal Mobile Telecommunication System (UMTS) based satellite system with variable link capacity. The main feature of the proposed algorithm is to maximize the resource utilization by adapting to the link conditions and the antenna gain of the users. The link quality of the user may vary depending on the weather condition, user mobility and any other propagation factors. The algorithm is compared against a non-adaptive admission control algorithm under different test cases. The proposed CAC algorithm is simulated using MATLAB and the performance results are obtained for a mix of multimedia traffic classes such as video streaming, web browsing, netted voice and email. The simulation results indicate a higher system performance in terms of the blocking ratio and the number of admitted connections.
44

Call admission control using cell breathing concept for wideband CDMA

Mishra, Jyoti L., Dahal, Keshav P., Hossain, M. Alamgir January 2006 (has links)
This paper presents a Call Admission Control (CAC) algorithm based fuzzy logic to maintain the quality of service using cell breathing concept. When a new call is accepted by a cell, its current user is generally affected due to cell breathing. The proposed CAC algorithm accepts a new call only if the current users in the cell are not jeopardized. Performance evaluation is done for single-cell and multicell scenarios. In multicell scenario dynamic assignment of users to the neighboring cell, so called handoff, has been considered to achieve a lower blocking probability. Handoff and new call requests are assumed with handoff being given preference using a reserved channel scheme. CAC for different types of services are shown which depend upon the bandwidth requirement for voice, data and video. Distance, arrival rate, bandwidth and nonorthogonality factor of the signal are considered for making the call acceptance decision. The paper demonstrates that fuzzy logic with the cell breathing concept can be used to develop a CAC algorithm to achieve a better performance evaluation.
45

A Connection Admission Control Framework for UMTS based Satellite Systems.An Adaptive Admission Control algorithm with pre-emption control mechanism for unicast and multicast communications in satellite UMTS.

Pillai, Anju January 2011 (has links)
In recent years, there has been an exponential growth in the use of multimedia applications. A satellite system offers great potential for multimedia applications with its ability to broadcast and multicast a large amount of data over a very large area as compared to a terrestrial system. However, the limited transmission capacity along with the dynamically varying channel conditions impedes the delivery of good quality multimedia service in a satellite system which has resulted in research efforts for deriving efficient radio resource management techniques. This issue is addressed in this thesis, where the main emphasis is to design a CAC framework which maximizes the utilization of the scarce radio resources available in the satellite and at the same time increases the performance of the system for a UMTS based satellite system supporting unicast and multicast traffic. The design of the system architecture for a UMTS based satellite system is presented. Based on this architecture, a CAC framework is designed consisting of three different functionalities: the admission control procedure, the retune procedure and the pre-emption procedure. The joint use of these functionalities is proposed to allow the performance of the system to be maintained under congestion. Different algorithms are proposed for different functionalities; an adaptive admission control algorithm, a greedy retune algorithm and three pre-emption algorithms (Greedy, SubSetSum, and Fuzzy). A MATLAB simulation model is developed to study the performance of the proposed CAC framework. A GUI is created to provide the user with the flexibility to configure the system settings before starting a simulation. The configuration settings allow the system to be analysed under different conditions. The performance of the system is measured under different simulation settings such as enabling and disabling of the two functionalities of the CAC framework; retune procedure and the pre-emption procedure. The simulation results indicate the CAC framework as a whole with all the functionalities performs better than the other simulation settings.
46

A BANDWIDTH ALLOCATION FRAMEWORK USING TIME ADAPTABILITY FOR MULTIMEDIA TRAFFIC IN WIRELESS AND MOBILE CELLULAR NETWORKS

CHANDA, PRITAM 27 September 2005 (has links)
No description available.
47

RESOURCE ALLOCATION IN INTEGRATED WIRELESS AND MOBILE NETWORKS

LI, WEI January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
48

RADIO RESOURCE MANAGEMENT IN CDMA-BASED COGNITIVE AND COOPERATIVE NETWORKS

Wang, Bin 10 1900 (has links)
<p>In this thesis we study radio resource management (RRM) in two types of CDMA-based wireless networks, cognitive radio networks (CRNs) and cooperative communication networks. In the networks, all simultaneous transmissions share the same spectrum and interfere with one another. Therefore, managing the transmission power is very important as it determines other aspects of the network resource allocations, such as transmission time and rate allocations. The main objective of the RRM is to efficiently utilize the available network resources for providing the mobile users with satisfactory quality of service (QoS).</p> / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
49

Design and Validation of QoS Aware Mobile Internet Access Procedures for Heterogeneous Networks.

Bianchi, G., Blefari-Melazzi, N., Chan, Pauline M.L., Holzbock, Matthias, Hu, Yim Fun, Jahn, A., Sheriff, Ray E. January 2003 (has links)
No / In this paper, the requirements for personal environments mobility are addressed from terminal and network perspectives. Practical mobility and Quality of Service (QoS) aware solutions are proposed for a heterogeneous network, comprising of satellite and terrestrial access networks connected to an IP core network. The aim, in adopting a heterogeneous environment, is to provide global, seamless service coverage to a specific area, allowing access to services independently of location. An important assumption is that nomadic user terminals attached to a particular segment should be able to exchange information with any other terminal connected to the network. This is to ensure transparency of device technology. Different communication scenarios are investigated in support of IPv4 and IPv6 operating on user platforms and over access segments. The heterogeneous network necessitates the need to perform handover between access segments to enable coverage extension and seamless connectivity. Handover procedures are analyzed, and an approach is presented that enables various operation and segment specific parameters to be taken into account when deciding upon the need to perform handover and in selecting the optimum access segment. In order to ensure transparency of network technology, the need for end-to-end QoS support is discussed, bearing in mind the deployment of both IntServ and DiffServ enabled routers in the core network. Following this, a new admission control scheme, named Gauge&Gate Reservation with Independent Probing (GRIP), is proposed. The paper concludes with a description of a laboratory testbed, which has been developed in order to verify the presented procedures, together with performance measurements of the handover and the GRIP algorithms.
50

Two-dimensional Markov chain model for performance analysis of call admission control algorithm in heterogeneous wireless networks

Sha, Sha, Halliwell, Rosemary A., Pillai, Prashant January 2013 (has links)
No / This paper proposes a novel call admission control (CAC) algorithm and develops a two-dimensional markov chain processes (MCP) analytical model to evaluate its performance for heterogeneous wireless network. Within the context of this paper, a hybrid UMTS-WLAN network is investigated. The designed threshold-based CAC algorithm is launched basing on the user’s classification and channel allocation policy. In this approach, channels are assigned dynamically in accordance with user class differentiation. The two-dimensional MCP mathematical analytic method reflects the system performance by appraising the dropping likelihood of handover traffics. The results show that the new CAC algorithm increases the admission probability of handover traffics, while guarantees the system quality of service (QoS) requirement.

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