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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.
31

Data Consistency and Conflict Avoidance in a Multi-User CAx Environment

Moncur, Robert Aaron 19 July 2012 (has links) (PDF)
This research presents a new method to preserve data consistency in a multi-user CAx environment. The new method includes three types of constraints which work by constraining and controlling both features and users across an entire multi-user CAx platform. The first type of constraint includes locking or reserving features to enable only one user at a time to edit a given feature. The second type of constraint, collaborative feature constraints, allows flexible constraining of each individual feature in a model, and the data that defines it. The third type of constraint, collaborative user constraints, allows the constraining of user permissions and user actions individually or as a group while providing as much flexibility as possible. To further present this method, mock-ups and suggested implementation guidelines are presented. To demonstrate the effectiveness of the method, a proof-of-concept implementation was built using the CATIA Connect multi-user CAD prototype developed at BYU. Using this implementation usage examples are provided to show how this method provides important tools that increase collaborative capabilities to a multi-user CAx system. By using the suggested method design teams will be able to better control how their data is used and edited, maintaining better data consistency and preventing data conflict and data misuse.
32

A Robust Architecture For Human Language Technology Systems

Stanley, Theban 05 August 2006 (has links)
Early human language technology systems were designed in a monolithic fashion. As these systems became more complex, this design became untenable. In its place, the concept of distributed processing evolved wherein the monolithic structure was decomposed into a number of functional components that could interact through a common protocol. This distributed framework was readily accepted by the research community and has been the cornerstone for the advancement in cutting edge human language technology prototype systems.The Defense Advanced Research Program Agency (DARPA) Communicator program has been highly successful in implementing this approach. The program has fueled the design and development of impressive human language technology applications. Its distributed framework has offered numerous benefits to the research community, including reduced prototype development time, sharing of components across sites, and provision of a standard evaluation platform. It has also enabled development of client-server applications with complex inter-process communication between modules. However, this latter feature, though beneficial, introduces complexities which reduce overall system robustness to failure. In addition, the ability to handle multiple users and multiple applications from a common interface is not innately supported. This thesis describes the enhancements to the original Communicator architecture that address robustness issues and provide a multiple multi-user application environment by enabling automated server startup, error detection and correction. Extensive experimentation and analysis were performed to measure improvements in robustness due to the enhancements to the DARPA architecture. A 7.2% improvement in robustness was achieved on the address querying task, which is the most complex task in the human language technology system.
33

Reducing Client-Server Communication for Efficient Real-Time Web Applications: The Use of Adaptive Polling as A Case Study for Multi-User Web Applications

Aziz, Hatem M. January 2019 (has links)
A key challenge of current multi-user web applications is to provide users with interesting events and information in real-time. This research reviews the most common real-time web techniques to identify drawbacks while exploring solutions to improve simplicity, efficiency, and compatibility within a client-server environment. Two solutions are proposed for enhancing the efficiency of real-time web techniques by reducing client-server communication. First, a model of browser monitoring control observes the browser activity and decides if to postpone client-server communication in the case of inactive tabs. This model was implemented and tested with results demonstrating that a significant number of client-server connections can be avoided in the browser background. These results suggest the solution can be optimised for any real-time technique as it benefits from being a developer side technique that works consistently on all browsers. Second, ‘Adaptive Polling’ is a pull-based real-time web technique to overcome bandwidth issues of the reverse AJAX method of ‘Polling’ by controlling the frequency of requesting updates from the server based on the last server response. This approach is implemented and tested with results showing how a significant number of redundant connections can be avoided while the server does not return updates. This solution is a good alternative to other real-time web techniques as it features low latency, the simplicity of implementation, and compatibility with all browsers and servers.
34

PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS OF DECORRELATING DETECTORS FOR DUAL-RATE SYNCHRONOUS DS/CDMA SYSTEMS OVER FREQUENCY-SELECTIVE RAYLEIGH FADING CHANNELS

LI, XIANGTAO 16 September 2002 (has links)
No description available.
35

MULTI-USER REDIRECTED WALKING AND RESETTING UTILIZING ARTIFICIAL POTENTIAL FIELDS

Hoffbauer, Cole 09 July 2018 (has links)
No description available.
36

Att skapa en fleranvändarmiljö : En kvalitativ fallstudie som undersöker tekniska aspekter och användarens perspektiv / Create a multi-user environment : A qualitative case study that examines technical aspects and the user's perspective

Geijersson, Hampus, Strandberg, Erik January 2018 (has links)
Studien avsåg att olika aspekter för att skapa underlag för utvecklingen med att förbättra fleranvändning. Syftet var, utöver de olika aspekterna, att på konceptuell nivå utvärdera hur fleranvändning kan utföras tekniskt samt undersöka hur användarna påverkas av denna förändring. Detta har utförts genom flertalet workshops och intervjuer. Vid två tillfällen har också författarna till rapporten utbildats i hur systemet är uppbyggt och hur det används. Utifrån detta har värdekriterier värderats mot olika tekniker. De teknikerna är Mutex, Semaphores och Oracle Tuxedo. På det sättet har olika aspekter beaktats och konceptuella modeller har målats upp. De olika teknikerna lever alla upp till de tekniska kraven som ställts, som programmeringsspråket C# och en databas från Oracle. I samverkan mellan användare och utvecklare har nivån på lösningen tagits fram, vad den ger användarna för nytta samtidigt som det inte är för komplicerat. Dessutom har det ställts krav angående prestandan, att den inte får försämras väsentligt. Användarna får ett liknande arbetssätt med minskade krav på samordning. Det medför att de kan samarbeta med de datamängder de behöver. Den lösning som passade bäst utifrån dessa kriterier var Mutex. / This paper is intended to study different aspects and take them in consideration to create a foundation for the developers to improve a multi-user environment. The purpose was to evaluate how to develop multi-user systems at a conceptual level with the technical aspects and describe how the users were affected by this. The study is based on multiple workshops and interviews. The writers have also been educated on how the system is used by the users and how the system was built, at two separate occasions. Based on this, criterias were made and these were valued against different techniques. These techniques are Mutex, Semaphores and Oracle Tuxedo. The criterias were considered and conceptual models were made to visualize the solution. The different techniques all live up to the constraints from the hardware and software of the case study, like the programming language C# and a database from Oracle. In a cooperation between the developers and users have the level of the solution been defined, where the solution ease the problems enough and still not too complex to implement. There have also been a few directions on the performance of the system. The solution should not be affecting the performance significantly. The users’working methods are not going to be particularly affected. The main part of the cooperation are not as needed as before. They can work in the same dataset concurrent in the datasets they required. On this basis the best technique to use in this case was Mutex.
37

Cognitive Ad-hoc Wireless Networks

Panagos, Adam 10 1900 (has links)
ITC/USA 2006 Conference Proceedings / The Forty-Second Annual International Telemetering Conference and Technical Exhibition / October 23-26, 2006 / Town and Country Resort & Convention Center, San Diego, California / Spectrum allocation in wireless communication and telemetry systems of the future may be performed in a dynamic and distributed manner, as opposed to static centralized regulations currently in place. This paper surveys a new area of research in the communications field known as cognitive radio which will allow dynamic sharing of spectral bands. An introduction to cognitive radio, a review of existing research results, and discussion of open problems in the area is provided.
38

Channel Capacity in the Presence of Feedback and Side Information

SEN, NEVROZ 12 July 2013 (has links)
This thesis deals with the Shannon-theoretic fundamental limits of channel coding for single-user channels with memory and feedback and for multi-user channels with side information. We first consider the feedback capacity of a class of symmetric channels with memory modelled as nite-state Markov channels. The symmetry yields the existence of a hidden Markov noise process that facilitates the channel description as a function of input and noise, where the function satisfies a desirable invertibility property. We show that feedback does not increase capacity for such class of finite-state channels and that both their non-feedback and feedback capacities are achieved by an independent and uniformly distributed input. As a result, the capacity is given as a difference of output and noise entropy rates, where the output is also a hidden Markov process; hence, capacity can be approximated via well known algorithms. We then consider the memoryless state-dependent multiple-access channel (MAC) where the encoders and the decoder are provided with various degrees of asymmetric noisy channel state information (CSI). For the case where the encoders observe causal, asymmetric noisy CSI and the decoder observes complete CSI, inner and outer bounds to the capacity region, which are tight for the sum-rate capacity, are provided. Next, single-letter characterizations for the channel capacity regions under each of the following settings are established: (a) the CSI at the encoders are non-causal and asymmetric deterministic functions of the CSI at the decoder (b) the encoders observe asymmetric noisy CSI with asymmetric delays and the decoder observes complete CSI; (c) a degraded message set scenario with asymmetric noisy CSI at the encoders and complete and/or noisy CSI at the decoder. Finally, we consider the above state-dependent MAC model and identify what is required to be provided to the receiver in order to get a tight converse for the sum-rate capacity. Inspired by the coding schemes of the lossless CEO problem as well as of a recently proposed achievable region, we provide an inner bound which demonstrates the rate required to transmit this information to the receiver. / Thesis (Ph.D, Mathematics & Statistics) -- Queen's University, 2013-07-12 13:48:59.849
39

Head tracked multi user autostereoscopic 3D display investigations

Brar, Rajwinder Singh January 2012 (has links)
The research covered in this thesis encompasses a consideration of 3D television requirements and a survey of stereoscopic and autostereoscopic methods. This confirms that although there is a lot of activity in this area, very little of this work could be considered suitable for television. The principle of operation, design of the components of the optical system and evaluation of two EU-funded (MUTED & HELIUM3D projects) glasses-free (autostereoscopic) displays is described. Four iterations of the display were built in MUTED, with the results of the first used in designing the second, third and fourth versions. The first three versions of the display use two-49 element arrays, one for the left eye and one for the right. A pattern of spots is projected onto the back of the arrays and these are converted into a series of collimated beams that form exit pupils after passing through the LCD. An exit pupil is a region in the viewing field where either a left or a right image is seen across the complete area of the screen; the positions of these are controlled by a multi-user head tracker. A laser projector was used in the first two versions and, although this projector operated on holographic principles in order to obtain the spot pattern required to produce the exit pupils, it should be noted that images seen by the viewers are not produced holographically so the overall display cannot be described as holographic. In the third version, the laser projector is replaced with a conventional LCOS projector to address the stability and brightness issues discovered in the second version. In 2009, true 120Hz displays became available; this led to the development of a fourth version of the MUTED display that uses 120Hz projector and LCD to overcome the problems of projector instability, produces full-resolution images and simplifies the display hardware. HELIUM3D: A multi-user autostereoscopic display based on laser scanning is also described in this thesis. This display also operates by providing head-tracked exit pupils. It incorporates a red, green and blue (RGB) laser illumination source that illuminates a light engine. Light directions are controlled by a spatial light modulator and are directed to the users’ eyes via a front screen assembly incorporating a novel Gabor superlens. In this work is described that covered the development of demonstrators that showed the principle of temporal multiplexing and a version of the final display that had limited functionality; the reason for this was the delivery of components required for a display with full functionality.
40

Scalable video streaming with prioritised network coding on end-system overlays

Sanna, Michele January 2014 (has links)
Distribution over the internet is destined to become a standard approach for live broadcasting of TV or events of nation-wide interest. The demand for high-quality live video with personal requirements is destined to grow exponentially over the next few years. Endsystem multicast is a desirable option for relieving the content server from bandwidth bottlenecks and computational load by allowing decentralised allocation of resources to the users and distributed service management. Network coding provides innovative solutions for a multitude of issues related to multi-user content distribution, such as the coupon-collection problem, allocation and scheduling procedure. This thesis tackles the problem of streaming scalable video on end-system multicast overlays with prioritised push-based streaming. We analyse the characteristic arising from a random coding process as a linear channel operator, and present a novel error detection and correction system for error-resilient decoding, providing one of the first practical frameworks for Joint Source-Channel-Network coding. Our system outperforms both network error correction and traditional FEC coding when performed separately. We then present a content distribution system based on endsystem multicast. Our data exchange protocol makes use of network coding as a way to collaboratively deliver data to several peers. Prioritised streaming is performed by means of hierarchical network coding and a dynamic chunk selection for optimised rate allocation based on goodput statistics at application layer. We prove, by simulated experiments, the efficient allocation of resources for adaptive video delivery. Finally we describe the implementation of our coding system. We highlighting the use rateless coding properties, discuss the application in collaborative and distributed coding systems, and provide an optimised implementation of the decoding algorithm with advanced CPU instructions. We analyse computational load and packet loss protection via lab tests and simulations, complementing the overall analysis of the video streaming system in all its components.

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