Spelling suggestions: "subject:"ehe pode"" "subject:"ehe mode""
151 |
A Dynamic Bandwidth Borrowing Algorithm for QoS Support in OVSF-CDMA SystemWu, Peng-Long 26 August 2003 (has links)
Orthogonal variable spreading factor (OVSF) code is used in WCDMA system to provide variable service data rates. However, most researches focus on decreasing the number of code assignment without considering how to manage bandwidth with properties of OVSF code. In this research, we propose a dynamic bandwidth borrowing algorithm for quality of service (QoS) supported in the OVSF-CDMA system. When a new call arrives or a current serviced call requests a higher data rate, but the system can not provide the required bandwidth, the borrowing algorithm can be activated to borrow bandwidth from current serviced calls. Also, a dynamic bandwidth reserved algorithm is proposed to avoid forced termination caused by the suddenly increasing bandwidth requirements of current serviced calls. Simulation results show that the value of throughput increases and the QoS of current serviced calls can be maintained.
|
152 |
A Study on Hybrid Automatic Repeat Request AlgorithmWu, Da-Cheng 13 August 2004 (has links)
There are two important techniques, automatic repeat request (ARQ) and forward error control (FEC), in error control systems. ARQ uses redundancy for detecting errors. While an error is detected in a transmitted code word, the receiver requests the transmitter to re-transmit the corrupted code word and the transmitted code word with detected error is discarded. However, the transmitted code word with detected error still contains a lot of information. ARQ schemes require a feedback channel. FEC relies on the controlled use of redundancy in the transmitted code word to detect and correct errors. Whether the decoding of the received code word is successful, no further processing is performed at the receiver. Therefore, FEC requires only a one-way link between the transmitter and receiver. In error control systems, a powerful FEC, turbo coding, was first proposed in 1993. Its performance was investigated by simulation to be close to the Shannon limit.
Hybrid ARQ (HARQ) systems after properly combining the ARQ techniques and FEC techniques, can be classified into type-I, type-II and type-III, and its performance can be elevated far more than ARQ systems. HARQ adopts the FEC methods to detect and correct the error patterns caused in the process of transmission. While errors are detected in the demodulated signals at receiver and fail to be corrected, the receiver will activate ARQ mechanism to request the transmitter to retransmit related information to achieve an error-free transmission.
In this thesis, a feasible type-II hybrid ARQ algorithm is proposed. Performance of the proposed algorithm is evaluated and analyzed by computer simulations. Compared with the traditional HARQ algorithms, the proposed algorithm can offer better performance in delay time and number of retransmissions with approximate throughput.
|
153 |
Research for Storeage Information ManagmentLiou, Shuh-Ling 18 August 2003 (has links)
none
|
154 |
Code design for erasure channels with limited or noisy feedbackNagasubramanian, Karthik 10 October 2008 (has links)
The availability of feedback in communication channels can significantly increase the
reliability of transmission while decreasing the encoding and decoding complexity.
Most of the applications like cellular telephony, satellite communications and internet
involve two-way transmission. Hence, it is important to devise coding schemes which
utilize the advantages of feedback. Most of the results in code designs, which make
use of feedback, concentrate on noiseless and instantaneous feedback. But in real-time
systems, the feedback is usually noisy, and is available at the transmitter after some
delay. Hence, it is important that we characterize the gains obtained in this case over
that of one-way channels.
We consider binary erasure channels to keep the problem tractable. For the erasure channels with noisy feedback, we have designed and analyzed a concatenated
coding scheme, which achieves lower probability of error than any forward error correcting code of the same rate. Hence, it is shown that even noisy feedback can be
useful in increasing the reliability of the channel.
We have designed and analyzed a coding scheme using Low Density Parity Check
(LDPC) codes along with selective retransmission strategy, which utilizes the limited
(but noiseless), delayed feedback to achieve low frame error rates even with small
blocklengths, at rates close to capacity. Furthermore, our scheme provides a way
to trade off feedback bandwidth for reliability. The complexity of this scheme is
lower than that of a forward error correcting code (FEC) of same blocklength and comparable performance.
We have shown that our scheme performs better than the Automatic Repeat
Request (ARQ) protocol which makes use of 1 bit feedback to signal retransmissions.
For fair comparisons, we have also incorporated the rate loss due to the bits which
are fed back in addition to the retransmitted bits. Thus, we have shown that for
two-way communications with complexity and delay constraints, it is better to utilize
the availability of feedback than to use just FEC.
|
155 |
Chip Level Space-Time-Frequency Complementary Code DesignWu, Yi-Zhang 05 August 2008 (has links)
none
|
156 |
Performance of Complementary Coded CDMA Performance of Complementary Coded CDMA Systems Using Modified Jakes Fading Channel SimulatorLi, Jyun-Sian 08 September 2009 (has links)
none
|
157 |
Sacred bilingualism code switching in medieval English verse /LeCluyse, Christopher Charles. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2002. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references. Available also from UMI Company.
|
158 |
Code-switching in Setswana in BotswanaTshinki, Abby Mosetsanagape. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (M.A. (Sociolinguistics))--University of Pretoria, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references.
|
159 |
Bilingual language contexts : variable language switching costs and phonetic productionOlson, Daniel James 25 October 2012 (has links)
Bilinguals are generally adept at segregating their two competing languages and switching between them when contextually appropriate, although it has been shown that switching languages incurs a reaction time delay, or switch cost (Kolers, 1966). These switch costs are modulated by language dominance, with bilinguals evidencing greater delays when switching into their dominant language relative to their non-dominant language (e.g. Meuter & Allport, 1999). While these asymmetrical switch costs have formed the basis for theories of bilingual language separation and selection, the key factor of language context, the degree to which each language is employed in a given paradigm or conversation, has yet to be considered. In addition, previous research and subsequent theories of language selection have focused exclusively on the lexical level, yet given the distinct phonetic categories in a bilingual’s two languages (Caramazza et al., 1973), selection must also occur at the phonetic level.
Addressing these gaps in the literature, this dissertation investigates the language switching costs and phonetic production of Spanish-English bilinguals in two experimental paradigms: a cued picture-naming task and an oral production task. In both studies, bilinguals (English-dominant, Spanish-dominant, and balanced bilinguals) produced language switches in varying language contexts, from monolingual to bilingual. Analyses focus on switch costs, error rates, and phonetic production, as a means to further the understanding of the language switching mechanism at the lexical and phonetic levels.
Drawing on results from the two experimental paradigms, this dissertation makes several major contributions to the ongoing discussion regarding bilingual language selection. First, this study provides evidence for a gradient nature of the language switching mechanism at the lexical level. Second, it contributes an examination of the effects of language switching at the phonetic level, demonstrating asymmetrical phonetic transfer. And third, parallels are drawn between the underlying effects of language switching and the phonetic realizations produced in connected speech. Implications are considered for theories of bilingual language selection, and a gradient account of the Inhibitory Control Model (Green, 1986) is proposed at both the lexical and phonetic levels. / text
|
160 |
Probabilistic encoding and feature selectivity in the somatosensory pathwayGollnick, Clare Ann 21 September 2015 (has links)
Our sensory experiences are encoded in the patterns of activity of the neurons in our brain. While we know we are capable of sensing and responding to a constantly changing sensory environment, we often study neural activity by repeatedly presenting the same stimulus and analyzing the average neural response. It is not understood how the average neural response represents the dynamic neural activity that produces our perceptions. In this work, we use functional imaging of the rodent primary somatosensory cortex, specifically the whisker representations, and apply classic signal-detection methods to test the predictive power of the average neural response. Stimulus features such as intensity are thought to be perceptually separable from the average representation; however, we show that stimulus intensity cannot be reliably decoded from neural activity from only a single experience. Instead, stimulus intensity was encoded only across many experiences. We observed this probabilistic neural code in multiple classic sensory paradigms including complex temporal stimuli (pairs of whisker deflections) and multi-whisker stimuli. These data suggest a novel framework for the encoding of stimulus features in the presence of high-neural variability. Specifically we suggest that our brains can compensate for unreliability by encoding information redundantly across cortical space. This thesis predicts that a somatosensory stimulus is not encoded identically each time it is experienced; instead, our brains use multiple redundant pathways to create a reliable sensory percept.
|
Page generated in 0.0383 seconds