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Cooperative Cognitive Wireless Networks over TV White and Gray Spaces / Reti Wireless Cognitive Cooperanti su TV White e Grey SpacesBedogni, Luca <1985> 04 June 2015 (has links)
Wireless networks rapidly became a fundamental pillar of everyday activities. Whether at work or elsewhere, people often benefits from always-on connections. This trend is likely to increase, and hence actual technologies struggle to cope with the increase in traffic demand. To this end, Cognitive Wireless Networks have been studied. These networks aim at a better utilization of the spectrum, by understanding the environment in which they operate, and adapt accordingly. In particular recently national regulators opened up consultations on the opportunistic use of the TV bands, which became partially free due to the digital TV switch over. In this work, we focus on the indoor use of of TVWS. Interesting use cases like smart metering and WiFI like connectivity arise, and are studied and compared against state of the art technology. New measurements for TVWS networks will be presented and evaluated, and fundamental characteristics of the signal derived. Then, building on that, a new model of spectrum sharing, which takes into account also the height from the terrain, is presented and evaluated in a real scenario. The principal limits and performance of TVWS operated networks will be studied for two main use cases, namely Machine to Machine communication and for wireless sensor networks, particularly for the smart grid scenario.
The outcome is that TVWS are certainly interesting to be studied and deployed, in particular when used as an additional offload for other wireless technologies. Seeing TVWS as the only wireless technology on a device is harder to be seen: the uncertainity in channel availability is the major drawback of opportunistic networks, since depending on the primary network channel allocation might lead in having no channels available for communication. TVWS can be effectively exploited as offloading solutions, and most of the contributions presented in this work proceed in this direction.
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Structural patterns for document engineering: from an empirical bottom-up analysis to an ontological theoryPoggi, Francesco <1982> 04 June 2015 (has links)
This thesis aims at investigating a new approach to document analysis based on the idea of structural patterns in XML vocabularies. My work is founded on the belief that authors do naturally converge to a reasonable use of markup languages and that extreme, yet valid instances are rare and limited. Actual documents, therefore, may be used to derive classes of elements (patterns) persisting across documents and distilling the conceptualization of the documents and their components, and may give ground for automatic tools and services that rely on no background information (such as schemas) at all.
The central part of my work consists in introducing from the ground up a formal theory of eight structural patterns (with three sub-patterns) that are able to express the logical organization of any XML document, and verifying their identifiability in a number of different vocabularies. This model is characterized by and validated against three main dimensions: terseness (i.e. the ability to represent the structure of a document with a small number of objects and composition rules), coverage (i.e. the ability to capture any possible situation in any document) and expressiveness (i.e. the ability to make explicit the semantics of structures, relations and dependencies).
An algorithm for the automatic recognition of structural patterns is then presented, together with an evaluation of the results of a test performed on a set of more than 1100 documents from eight very different vocabularies. This language-independent analysis confirms the ability of patterns to capture and summarize the guidelines used by the authors in their everyday practice.
Finally, I present some systems that work directly on the pattern-based representation of documents. The ability of these tools to cover very different situations and contexts confirms the effectiveness of the model.
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CMoS lab-on-a-chip devices for individual cell biologyRomani, Aldo <1975> 22 April 2005 (has links)
The development of microlectronic lab-on-a-chip devices (LOACs) can now be
pursued thanks to the continous advances in silicon technology. LOACs are miniaturized devices
whose aim is to perform in a more efficient way specific chemical or biological analysis protocols
which are usually carried out with traditional laboratory equipment. In this application area, CMOS
technology has the potential to integrate LOAC functionalities for cell biology applications in single
chips, e.g. sensors, actuators, signal conditioning and processing circuits. In this work, after a
review of the state of the art, the development of a CMOS prototype chip for individual cell
manipulation and detection based on dielectrophoresis will be presented. Issues related to the
embedded optical and capacitive detection of cells will be discussed together with the main
experimental results obtained in manipulation and detection of living cells and microparticles.
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Utilizzo di un aeromodello radiocomandato per prove di navigazione autonomaPondi, Claudio <1978> 29 May 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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Model and control of tendon actuated robotsPalli, Gianluca <1977> 29 May 2007 (has links)
The use of tendons for the transmission of the forces and the movements in robotic devices
has been investigated from several researchers all over the world. The interest in
this kind of actuation modality is based on the possibility of optimizing the position of
the actuators with respect to the moving part of the robot, in the reduced weight, high reliability,
simplicity in the mechanic design and, finally, in the reduced cost of the resulting
kinematic chain.
After a brief discussion about the benefits that the use of tendons can introduce in
the motion control of a robotic device, the design and control aspects of the UB Hand 3
anthropomorphic robotic hand are presented. In particular, the tendon-sheaths transmission
system adopted in the UB Hand 3 is analyzed and the problem of force control and
friction compensation is taken into account.
The implementation of a tendon based antagonistic actuated robotic arm is then investigated.
With this kind of actuation modality, and by using transmission elements with
nonlinear force/compression characteristic, it is possible to achieve simultaneous stiffness
and position control, improving in this way the safety of the device during the operation
in unknown environments and in the case of interaction with other robots or with humans.
The problem of modeling and control of this type of robotic devices is then considered
and the stability analysis of proposed controller is reported.
At the end, some tools for the realtime simulation of dynamic systems are presented.
This realtime simulation environment has been developed with the aim of improving the
reliability of the realtime control applications both for rapid prototyping of controllers
and as teaching tools for the automatic control courses.
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Robotic manipulation: planning and control for dexterous graspCarloni, Raffaella <1975> 29 May 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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Fault tolerance in large scale systems: hybrid and distributed approachesCapiluppi, Marta <1978> 29 May 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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A model and an algebra for semi-structured and full-text queriesBuratti, Giacomo <1974> 16 April 2007 (has links)
The need for a convergence between semi-structured data management and Information Retrieval techniques is manifest to the scientific community. In order to fulfil this growing
request, W3C has recently proposed XQuery Full Text, an IR-oriented extension of XQuery. However, the issue of query optimization requires the study of important properties like query equivalence and containment; to this aim, a formal representation of document and queries is needed. The goal of this thesis is to establish such formal background. We define a data model for XML documents and propose an algebra able to represent most of XQuery Full-Text expressions. We show how an XQuery Full-Text expression can be translated into an algebraic expression and how an algebraic expression
can be optimized.
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Data and behavioral contracts for web servicesCarpineti, Samuele <1978> 16 April 2007 (has links)
The recent trend in Web services is fostering a computing scenario where loosely coupled parties interact in a distributed and dynamic environment. Such interactions are sequences of xml messages and in order to assemble parties – either statically or dynamically – it is important to verify that the “contracts” of the parties are “compatible”. The Web Service Description Language (wsdl) is a standard used for describing one-way (asynchronous) and request/response (synchronous) interactions. Web Service Conversation Language extends wscl contracts by allowing the description of arbitrary, possibly cyclic sequences of exchanged messages between communicating parties. Unfortunately, neither wsdl nor wscl can effectively define a notion of compatibility, for the very simple reason that they do not provide any formal characterization of their contract languages. We define two contract languages for Web services. The first one is a data contract language and allow us to describe a Web service in terms of messages (xml documents) that can be sent or received. The second one is a behavioral contract language and allow us to give an abstract definition of the Web service conversation protocol. Both these languages are equipped with a sort of “sub-typing” relation and, therefore, they are suitable to be used for querying Web services repositories. In particular a query for a service compatible with a given contract may safely return services with “greater” contract.
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Pattern-based segmentation of digital documents: model and implementationdi Iorio, Angelo <1977> 16 April 2007 (has links)
This thesis proposes a new document model, according to which any document can be segmented in some independent components and transformed in a pattern-based projection, that only uses a very small set of objects and composition rules. The point is that such a normalized document expresses the same fundamental information of the original one, in a simple, clear and unambiguous way. The central part of my work consists of discussing that model, investigating how a digital document can be segmented, and how a segmented version can be used to implement advanced tools of conversion. I present seven patterns which are versatile enough to capture the most relevant documents’ structures, and whose minimality and rigour make that implementation possible. The abstract model is then instantiated into an actual markup language, called IML. IML is a general and extensible language, which basically adopts an XHTML syntax, able to capture a posteriori the only content of a digital document. It is compared with other languages and proposals, in order to clarify its role and
objectives. Finally, I present some systems built upon these ideas. These applications are evaluated in terms of users’ advantages, workflow improvements and impact over the overall quality of the output. In particular, they cover heterogeneous content management processes: from web editing to collaboration (IsaWiki and WikiFactory), from e-learning (IsaLearning) to professional printing (IsaPress).
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