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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.
91

A framework for the design, prototyping and evaluation of mobile interfaces for domestic environments

Holroyd, Patrick Michael January 2013 (has links)
The idea of the smart home has been discussed for over three decades, but it has yet to achieve mass-market adoption. This thesis asks the question Why is my home not smart? It highlights four main areas that are barriers to adoption, and concentrates on a single one of these issues: usability. It presents an investigation that focuses on design, prototyping and evaluation of mobile interfaces for domestic environments resulting in the development of a novel framework. A smart home is the physical realisation of a ubiquitous computing system for domestic living. The research area offers numerous benefits to end-users such as convenience, assistive living, energy saving and improved security and safety. However, these benefits have yet to become accessible due to a lack of usable smart home control interfaces. This issue is considered a key reason for lack of adoption and is the focus for this thesis. Within this thesis, a framework is introduced as a novel approach for the design, prototyping and evaluation of mobile interfaces for domestic environments. Included within this framework are three components. Firstly, the Reconfigurable Multimedia Environment (RME), a physical evaluation and observation space for conducting user centred research. Secondly, Simulated Interactive Devices (SID), a video-based development and control tool for simulating interactive devices commonly found within a smart home. Thirdly, iProto, a tool that facilitates the production and rapid deployment of high fidelity prototypes for mobile touch screen devices. This framework is evaluated as a round-tripping toolchain for prototyping smart home control and found to be an efficient process for facilitating the design and evaluation of such interfaces.
92

Spectrally efficient Non-Orthogonal Multiple Access (NOMA) techniques for future generation mobile systems

Bukar, Ibrahim January 2017 (has links)
With the expectation of over a 1000-fold increase in the number of connected devices by 2020, efficient utilization of the limited bandwidth has become ever more important in the design of mobile wireless systems. Furthermore, the ever-increasing demand for higher data rates has made it necessary for a new waveform design that satisfies not only throughput demands, but network capacity as well. One such technique recently proposed is the non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) which utilizes the distance-dependent power domain multiplexing, based on the principles of signal superposition. In this thesis, new spectrally efficient non-orthogonal signal techniques are proposed. The goal of the schemes is to allow simultaneous utilization of the same time frequency network resources. This is achieved by designing component signals in both power and phase domain such that users are precoded or preformed to form a single and uniquely decodable composite signal. The design criteria are based on maximizing either the sum rate or spectral efficiency, minimizing multi-user interference and detection ambiguity, and maximizing the minimum Euclidean distance between the composite constellation points. The design principles are applied in uplink, downlink and coordinated multipoint (CoMP) scenarios. We assume ideal channel state with perfect estimation, low mobility and synchronization scenarios so as to prove the concept and serve as a bound for any future work in non-ideal conditions. Extensive simulations and numerical analysis are carried to show the superiority and compatibility of the schemes. First, a new NOMA signal design called uplink NOMA with constellation precoding is proposed. The precoding weights are generated at the eNB based on the number of users to be superposed. The eNB signals the precoding weights to be employed by the users to adjust their transmission. The adjustments utilize the channel state information estimated from common periodic pilots broadcasted by the eNB. The weights ensure the composite received signal at the eNB belongs to the pre-known constellation. Furthermore, the users precode to the eNB antenna that requires the least total transmit power from all the users. At the eNB, joint maximum likelihood (JML) detection is employed to recover the component signals. As the composite constellation is as that of a single user transmitting that same constellation, multiple access interference can be viewed as absent, which allows multiple users to transmit at their full rates. Furthermore, the power gain achieved by the sum of the component signals maximizes the sum rate. Secondly, the constellation design principle is employed in the downlink scenario. In the scheme, called downlink NOMA with constellation preforming, the eNB preforms the users signal with power and phase weights prior to transmission. The preforming ensures multi-user interference is eliminated and the spectral efficiency maximized. The preformed composite constellation is broadcasted by the eNB which is received by all users. Subsequently, the users perform JML detection with the designed constellation to extract their individual component signals. Furthermore, improved signal reliability is achieved in transmit and receive diversity scenarios in the schemes called distributed transmit and receive diversity combining, respectively. Thirdly, the constellation preforming on the downlink is extended to MIMO spatial multiplexing scenarios. The first MIMO scheme, called downlink NOMA with constellation preforming, each eNB antenna transmits a preformed composite signal composed of a set of multiple users' streams. This achieves spatial multiplexing with diversity with less transmit antennas, reducing costs associated with multiple RF chains, while still maximizing the sum rate. In the second MIMO scheme, a highly spectrally efficient MIMO preforming scheme is proposed. The scheme, called group layer MIMO with constellation preforming, the eNB preforms to a specific group of users on each transmit antenna. In all the schemes, the users perform JML detection to recover their signals. Finally, the adaptability of the constellation design is shown in CoMP. The scheme, called CoMP with joint constellation processing, the additional degrees of freedom, in form of interfering eNBs, are utilized to enable spatial multiplexing to a user with a single receive antenna. This is achieved by precoding each stream from the coordinating eNB with weights signalled by a central eNB. Consequently, the inter-cell interference is eliminated and the sum-rate maximized. To reduce the total power spent on precoding, an active cell selection scheme is proposed where the precoding is employed on the highest interferers to the user. Furthermore, a power control scheme is applied the design principle, where the objective is to reduce cross-layer interference by adapting the transmission power to the mean channel gain.
93

Economically sustainable public security and emergency network exploiting a broadband communications satellite

Lawal, Lasisi Salami January 2014 (has links)
The research contributes to work in Rapid Deployment of a National Public Security and Emergency Communications Network using Communication Satellite Broadband. Although studies in Public Security Communication networks have examined the use of communications satellite as an integral part of the Communication Infrastructure, there has not been an in-depth design analysis of an optimized regional broadband-based communication satellite in relation to the envisaged service coverage area, with little or no terrestrial last-mile telecommunications infrastructure for delivery of satellite solutions, applications and services. As such, the research provides a case study of a Nigerian Public Safety Security Communications Pilot project deployed in regions of the African continent with inadequate terrestrial last mile infrastructure and thus requiring a robust regional Communications Satellite complemented with variants of terrestrial wireless technologies to bridge the digital hiatus as a short and medium term measure apart from other strategic needs. The research not only addresses the pivotal role of a secured integrated communications Public safety network for security agencies and emergency service organizations with its potential to foster efficient information symmetry amongst their operations including during emergency and crisis management in a timely manner but demonstrates a working model of how analogue spectrum meant for Push-to-Talk (PTT) services can be re-farmed and digitalized as a “dedicated” broadband-based public communications system. The network's sustainability can be secured by using excess capacity for the strategic commercial telecommunication needs of the state and its citizens. Utilization of scarce spectrum has been deployed for Nigeria's Cashless policy pilot project for financial and digital inclusion. This effectively drives the universal access goals, without exclusivity, in a continent, which still remains the least wired in the world.
94

Efficient and flexible geocasting for opportunistic networks

Rajaei, Aydin January 2016 (has links)
With the proliferation of smartphones and their advanced connectivity capabilities, opportunistic networks have gained a lot of traction during the past years; they are suitable for increasing network capacity and sharing ephemeral, localised content. They can also offload traffic from cellular networks to device-to-device ones, when cellular networks are heavily stressed. Opportunistic networks can play a crucial role in communication scenarios where the network infrastructure is inaccessible due to natural disasters, large scale terrorist attacks or government censorship. Geocasting, where messages are destined to specific locations (casts) instead of explicitly identified devices, has a large potential in real world opportunistic networks, however it has attracted little attention in the context of opportunistic networking. In this thesis, we propose Geocasting Spray And Flood (GSAF), a simple but efficient and flexible geocasting protocol for opportunistic, delay tolerant networks. GSAF follows a simple but elegant and flexible approach where messages take random walks towards the destination cast. Messages that follow directions away from the cast are extinct when the device buffer gets full, freeing space for new messages to be delivered. In GSAF, casts do not have to be pre-defined; instead users can route messages to arbitrarily defined casts. Also, the addressed cast is flexible in comparison to other approaches and can take complex shapes in the network. DA-GSAF as the direction aware version of the GSAF is proposed as well which use location information to aid routing decisions in the GSAF. Extensive evaluation shows that GSAF and DA-GSAF are significantly more efficient than existing solutions, in terms of message delivery ratio and latency as well as network overhead.
95

Maximum concurrent flow of multiple channels in wireless mesh network.

January 2008 (has links)
Cheung, Kwok Sum. / Thesis submitted in: October 2007. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2008. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 71-74). / Abstracts in English and Chinese. / Abstract --- p.i / Acknowledgement --- p.ii / Chapter 1 --- Introduction --- p.1 / Chapter 1.1 --- Infrastructure of Wireless Mesh Networks --- p.1 / Chapter 1.2 --- Characteristics and Advantages of WMNs --- p.4 / Chapter 1.3 --- Challenges --- p.7 / Chapter 2 --- Background Study --- p.10 / Chapter 2.1 --- Maximum Concurrent Flow Problem --- p.10 / Chapter 2.2 --- Channel Assignment --- p.12 / Chapter 2.3 --- Congestion Control --- p.13 / Chapter 3 --- Problem Formulation --- p.16 / Chapter 3.1 --- Physical Model --- p.16 / Chapter 3.2 --- MCFP of Multiple Channels --- p.19 / Chapter 3.2.1 --- MCFP Channel Assignment Pattern --- p.19 / Chapter 3.2.2 --- Min-max Spectral Radius Optimization --- p.22 / Chapter 3.2.3 --- Min-max Channel Assignment Problem --- p.24 / Chapter 4 --- Min-max Pattern in Chain Network --- p.26 / Chapter 4.1 --- Chain Network --- p.26 / Chapter 4.2 --- Min-max Channel Assignment Pattern --- p.28 / Chapter 5 --- Bottleneck Assignment Heuristic Algorithm --- p.35 / Chapter 5.1 --- Algorithm Description --- p.35 / Chapter 5.1.1 --- Introduction --- p.35 / Chapter 5.1.2 --- First Part of the BAHA --- p.38 / Chapter 5.1.3 --- Second Part of the BAHA --- p.43 / Chapter 5.2 --- Optimality --- p.47 / Chapter 5.3 --- Simulation of the BAHA --- p.53 / Chapter 5.3.1 --- Performance evaluation --- p.55 / Chapter 6 --- Sequential Assignment Heuristic Algorithm --- p.59 / Chapter 6.1 --- Algorithm Description --- p.59 / Chapter 6.1.1 --- Introduction --- p.59 / Chapter 6.1.2 --- Lower bound of spectral radius --- p.60 / Chapter 6.1.3 --- Procedures of SAHA --- p.62 / Chapter 6.2 --- Simulation Result --- p.64 / Chapter 6.3 --- Performance evaluation --- p.64 / Chapter 7 --- Conclusion --- p.69 / Bibliography --- p.71
96

Adaptive protocol suite for wireless sensor and ad hoc networks

Liu, Bao Hua (Michael), Computer Science & Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, UNSW January 2005 (has links)
Continuing advances in wireless communications and MEMS (Micro-Electro Mechan- ical Systems) technologies have fostered the construction of a wide variety of sensor and ad hoc networks. These networks have broad applications spanning wide ar- eas, such as environmental monitoring, infrastructure maintenance, traffic manage- ment, energy management, disaster mitigation, personal medical monitoring, smart building, as well as military and defence. While these applications require high per- formance from the network, they suffer from resource constraints (such as limited battery power, processing capability, buffer space, etc.) that do not appear in tra- ditional wired networks. The inherent infrastructure-less characteristic of the sensor and ad hoc networks creates significant challenges. This dissertation addresses these challenges with two protocol designs. The main contributions of this dissertation are the design and evaluation of CS- MAC (stands for CDMA Sensor MAC), a novel multi-channel media access control (MAC) protocol for direct sequence code division multiple access (DS-CDMA) wire- less sensor networks. Our protocol design uses combination of DS-CDMA and fre- quency division to reduce the channel interference and consequently improves system capacity and network throughput. We provide theoretical characterisation of the mean multiple access interference (MAI) at a given node in relation to the number of frequency channels. We show that by using only a small number of frequency chan- nels, the mean MAI can be reduced significantly. Through discrete event simulation (using UC Berkerly NS-2 simulator), we provide comparison of our proposed system to a pure DS-CDMA system as well as a contention based system. Simulation results reveal that our proposed system can achieve significant improvement in system efi ciency (measured in packet/second/channel) of a contention based system. When the same number of packets are transmitted in the network, our system consumes much less communication energy compared to the contention based system. A distributed channel allocation protocol is also proposed for the network forma- tion phase. We prove that our algorithm converges with correct channel assignments. Simulation results reveal that a much smaller number of channels is required than theoretical value when nodes are uniformly randomly deployed. The second contribution of this dissertation involves the design and evaluation of two location-aware select optimal neighbour (SON) algorithms for CSMA/CA based MAC protocol for wireless ad hoc networks. Both algorithms concentrate on the improvement of energy eficiency of the whole network through the optimisation of the number of neighbours of each node. Our algorithms not only consider radio electronic energy consumption (e.g., coding, decoding) and radio transmission energy consumption (e.g., power amplifier), but also the electronic energy consumption at those irrelevant receivers (those who are not addressed by the transmission) that are located within the transmission range. Through simulations, we show that our algorithms can achieve signi??cant energy savings compared to the standard IEEE 802.11.
97

Signal processing techniques for wireless communication systems : a thesis submitted to the Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering of the University of Adelaide / by Van Khanh Nguyen.

Nguyen Van Khanh, 1978- January 2003 (has links)
"Dissertation submitted, September 2003." / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 159-172) / xvi, 172 leaves : ill. ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, 2004
98

Spatial usage and power control in multihop wireless networks

Zhou, Yihong, January 1900 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2006. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
99

A software defined radio for research into cognitive radio

Pratt, Jason Michael, January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Missouri--Rolla, 2007. / Vita. The entire thesis text is included in file. Title from title screen of thesis/dissertation PDF file (viewed December 7, 2007) Includes bibliographical references (p. 171-173).
100

Adaptive protocol suite for wireless sensor and ad hoc networks

Liu, Bao Hua (Michael), Computer Science & Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, UNSW January 2005 (has links)
Continuing advances in wireless communications and MEMS (Micro-Electro Mechan- ical Systems) technologies have fostered the construction of a wide variety of sensor and ad hoc networks. These networks have broad applications spanning wide ar- eas, such as environmental monitoring, infrastructure maintenance, traffic manage- ment, energy management, disaster mitigation, personal medical monitoring, smart building, as well as military and defence. While these applications require high per- formance from the network, they suffer from resource constraints (such as limited battery power, processing capability, buffer space, etc.) that do not appear in tra- ditional wired networks. The inherent infrastructure-less characteristic of the sensor and ad hoc networks creates significant challenges. This dissertation addresses these challenges with two protocol designs. The main contributions of this dissertation are the design and evaluation of CS- MAC (stands for CDMA Sensor MAC), a novel multi-channel media access control (MAC) protocol for direct sequence code division multiple access (DS-CDMA) wire- less sensor networks. Our protocol design uses combination of DS-CDMA and fre- quency division to reduce the channel interference and consequently improves system capacity and network throughput. We provide theoretical characterisation of the mean multiple access interference (MAI) at a given node in relation to the number of frequency channels. We show that by using only a small number of frequency chan- nels, the mean MAI can be reduced significantly. Through discrete event simulation (using UC Berkerly NS-2 simulator), we provide comparison of our proposed system to a pure DS-CDMA system as well as a contention based system. Simulation results reveal that our proposed system can achieve significant improvement in system efi ciency (measured in packet/second/channel) of a contention based system. When the same number of packets are transmitted in the network, our system consumes much less communication energy compared to the contention based system. A distributed channel allocation protocol is also proposed for the network forma- tion phase. We prove that our algorithm converges with correct channel assignments. Simulation results reveal that a much smaller number of channels is required than theoretical value when nodes are uniformly randomly deployed. The second contribution of this dissertation involves the design and evaluation of two location-aware select optimal neighbour (SON) algorithms for CSMA/CA based MAC protocol for wireless ad hoc networks. Both algorithms concentrate on the improvement of energy eficiency of the whole network through the optimisation of the number of neighbours of each node. Our algorithms not only consider radio electronic energy consumption (e.g., coding, decoding) and radio transmission energy consumption (e.g., power amplifier), but also the electronic energy consumption at those irrelevant receivers (those who are not addressed by the transmission) that are located within the transmission range. Through simulations, we show that our algorithms can achieve signi??cant energy savings compared to the standard IEEE 802.11.

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