Spelling suggestions: "subject:"communcations"" "subject:"communications""
1 |
Radio antennas on glassLowes, Philip January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
|
2 |
Error exponents for a direct detection optical channelJanuary 1983 (has links)
by Pierre A. Humblet. / Bibliography: p. 16. / "October 1983." / NSF-ECS-8217668
|
3 |
Testing digital receiver performance through an HF environment simulatorPennington, Wayne Phillip January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (M.Eng.Sc.)--School of Electrical & Electronic Engineering , 2005.
|
4 |
On Synchronisation Issues in Wireless Mobile Digital CommunicationsClarke, Richard January 2002 (has links)
Symbol timing recovery is an important function of any digital receiver. In the wireless mobile data field the task of establishing accurate symbol timing at the receiver is complicated by the time varying channel. This time varying channel also makes the use of coherent modulation schemes significantly more difficult. This is one of the major reasons that almost all existing mobile wireless digital standards utilise some form of differential modulation and detection. This thesis takes a primarily practical approach to the investigation of timing and phase estimation problems. The main focus of the work is on the comparison of three existing all digital timing synchronisation algorithms, two of which were originally designed for the AWGN channel, and the third was designed from ML principles for the Rayleigh fading channel. In order to test these sub-systems in the wider context of receiver performance, a pilot symbol assisted (PSAM) receiver was simulated to compare the effects of the different synchronisers on receiver steady state performance. Finally, because the real time implementation aspects of software radio are of considerable interest to the author, some attempt has been made to migrate the MATLAB synchronisation simulations to a real time DSP platform, specifically the TMS320C6701 Texas Instruments floating point device.
|
5 |
The effects of interpersonal communication style on task performance and well beingTaylor, Howard January 2007 (has links)
This thesis is based around five studies examining the psychology of interpersonal communication applied to organizational settings. The studies are designed to examine the question of how the way that people in positions of power in organizations communicate with subordinates, affects various measures of health, well-being and productivity. It is impossible to study modern organisational communication without recognising the importance of electronic communication. The use of e-mail and other forms of text messaging is now ubiquitous in all areas of communication. The studies in this thesis include the use of e-mail as a medium of communication and examine some of the potential effects of electronic versus face-to-face and verbal communication. The findings of the studies support the basic hypothesis that: it is not what is said that matters but how it is said. The results showed that an unsupportive, formal, authoritarian style of verbal or written communication is likely to have a negative effect on health, well-being and productivity compared with a supportive, informal and egalitarian style. There are also indications that the effects of damaging communications may not be confined to the initial recipient of the message. Organizational communication does not take place in a vacuum. Any negative consequences are likely to be transmitted by the recipient, either back to the sender or on to other colleagues with implications for the wider organisational climate. These findings are based on communications that would not necessarily be immediately recognised as obviously offensive or bullying, or even uncivil. The effects of these relatively mild but unsupportive communications may have implications for the selection and training of managers. In the final section of the thesis there is a discussion of how examples of various electronically recorded messages might be used as training material.
|
6 |
Long-Range High-Throughput Wireless Communication Using Microwave Radiation Across Agricultural FieldsPaul Christian Thieme (8151186) 19 December 2019 (has links)
Over the past three decades,
agricultural machinery has made the transition from purely mechanical systems
to hybrid machines, reliant on both mechanical and electronic systems. A this
transformation continues, the most modern agricultural machinery uses networked
systems that require a network connection to function to their full potential. In
rural areas, providing this network connection has proven difficult. Obstacles,
distance from access points, and incomplete coverage of cellular connection are
all challenges to be overcome. “Off the shelf” commercial-grade Wi-Fi
equipment, including many products from Ubiquiti like the Bullet M2 transceiver
and the PowerBeam point-to-point linking system, as well as antennas by
Terrawave, Crane, and Hawking, were installed in a purpose-built system which
could be implemented on a production farm. This system consisted of a
tower-mounted access point which used an antenna with a 65<sup>o</sup>
beamwidth, and the test included distances up to 1150 meters in an agricultural
setting with corn and soybeans. Some sensors were stationary and the other
platform was a tractor following a path around the farm with both 8dBi and
15dBi gain antennas. Through all tests, throughput never dropped below 5 Mb/s,
and the latency of successful connections never exceeded 20ms. Packets were
rarely dropped and never accounted for a significant portion of all packet
transmission attempts. Environmental effects like immediate precipitation, crop
heights, recent rainfall, and ambient temperature had little or no effect on
wireless network characteristics. As a result, it was proven that as long as
line-of-sight was maintained, reliable wireless connectivity could be achieved
despite varying conditions using microwave radiation. Network throughput was
marginally affected by the change in free space path loss due to increased
distance between the access point and the client, as well as travel by the
mobile client outside the beamwidth of the access point. By enabling this coverage, it is hoped that the implementation of new
agricultural technology utilizing a live network connection will progress more
rapidly.
|
7 |
Blind Detection Techniques For Spread Spectrum Audio WatermarkingKrishna Kumar, S 10 1900 (has links)
In spreads pectrum (SS)watermarking of audio signals, since the watermark acts as an additive noise to the host audio signal, the most important challenge is to maintain perceptual transparency. Human perception is a very sensitive apparatus, yet can be exploited to hide some information, reliably. SS watermark embedding has been proposed, in which psycho-acoustically shaped pseudo-random sequences are embedded directly into the time domain audio signal. However, these watermarking schemes use informed detection, in which the original signal is assumed available to the watermark detector. Blind detection of psycho-acoustically shaped SS watermarking is not well addressed in the literature. The problem is still interesting, because, blind detection is more practical for audio signals and, psycho-acoustically shaped watermarks embedding offers the maximum possible watermark energy under requirements of perceptual transparency.
In this thesis we study the blind detection of psycho-acoustically shaped SS watermarks in time domain audio signals. We focus on a class of watermark sequences known as random phase watermarks, where the watermark magnitude spectrum is defined by the perceptual criteria and the randomness of the sequence lies in their phase spectrum. Blind watermark detectors, which do not have access to the original host signal, may seem handicapped, because an approximate watermark has to be re-derived from the watermarked signal. Since the comparison of blind detection with fully informed detection is unfair, a hypothetical detection scheme, denoted as semi-blind detection, is used as a reference benchmark. In semi-blind detection, the host signal as such is not available for detection, but it is assumed that sufficient information is available for deriving the exact watermark, which could be embedded in the given signal. Some reduction in performance is anticipated in blind detection over the semi-blind detection. Our experiments revealed that the statistical performance of the blind detector is better than that of the semi-blind detector. We analyze the watermark-to-host correlation (WHC) of random phase watermarks, and the results indicate that WHC is higher when a legitimate watermark is present in the audio signal, which leads to better detection performance. Based on these findings, we attempt to harness this increased correlation in order to further improve the performance. The analysis shows that uniformly distributed phase difference (between the host signal and the watermark) provides maximum advantage. This property is verified through experimentation over a variety of audio signals.
In the second part, the correlated nature of audio signals is identified as a potential threat to reliable blind watermark detection, and audio pre-whitening methods are suggested as a possible remedy. A direct deterministic whitening (DDW) scheme is derived, from the frequency domain analysis of the time domain correlation process. Our experimental studies reveal that, the Savitzky-Golay Whitening (SGW), which is otherwise inferior to DDW technique, performs better when the audio signal is predominantly low pass. The novelty of this work lies in exploiting the complementary nature of the two whitening techniques and combining them to obtain a hybrid whitening (HbW) scheme. In the hybrid scheme the DDW and SGW techniques are selectively applied, based on short time spectral characteristics of the audio signal. The hybrid scheme extends the reliability of watermark detection to a wider range of audio signals. We also discuss enhancements to the HbW technique for robustness to temporal offsets and filtering. Robustness of SS watermark blind detection, with hybrid whitening, is determined through a set of experiments and the results are presented. It is seen that the watermarking scheme is robust to common signal processing operations such as additive noise, filtering, lossy compression, etc.
|
Page generated in 0.0639 seconds