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Author

Eugene Visotsky

Other affiliations: Nokia, Bell Labs, Motorola
Bio: Eugene Visotsky is an academic researcher from Nokia Networks. The author has contributed to research in topics: MIMO & Antenna (radio). The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 76 publications receiving 1687 citations. Previous affiliations of Eugene Visotsky include Nokia & Bell Labs.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: New theoretical models for understanding the heterogeneous cellular networks of tomorrow are discussed, and the practical constraints and challenges that operators must tackle in order for these networks to reach their potential are discussed.
Abstract: The proliferation of internet-connected mobile devices will continue to drive growth in data traffic in an exponential fashion, forcing network operators to dramatically increase the capacity of their networks. To do this cost-effectively, a paradigm shift in cellular network infrastructure deployment is occurring away from traditional (expensive) high-power tower-mounted base stations and towards heterogeneous elements. Examples of heterogeneous elements include microcells, picocells, femtocells, and distributed antenna systems (remote radio heads), which are distinguished by their transmit powers/ coverage areas, physical size, backhaul, and propagation characteristics. This shift presents many opportunities for capacity improvement, and many new challenges to co-existence and network management. This article discusses new theoretical models for understanding the heterogeneous cellular networks of tomorrow, and the practical constraints and challenges that operators must tackle in order for these networks to reach their potential.

911 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The main components of the newly developed 3D channel model are described, which follows the framework of WINNERII/WINNER+ while also extending the applicability and the accuracy of the model by introducing some height dependent and distance dependent elevation related parameters.
Abstract: Multi-antenna techniques capable of exploiting the elevation dimension are anticipated to be an important air-interface enhancement targeted to handle the expected growth in mobile traffic. In order to enable the development and evaluation of such multi-antenna techniques, the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) has recently developed a three-dimensional (3D) channel model. The existing two-dimensional (2D) channel models do not capture the elevation channel characteristics, making them insufficient for such studies. This article describes the main components of the newly developed 3D channel model and the motivations behind introducing them. One key factor is the ability to model channels for users located on different floors of a building (at different heights). This is achieved by capturing a user height dependency in modelling some channel characteristics including pathloss, lineof- sight (LOS) probability, etc. In general, this 3D channel model follows the framework of WINNERII/WINNER+ while also extending the applicability and the accuracy of the model by introducing some height dependent and distance dependent elevation related parameters.

110 citations

Patent
20 Aug 2001
TL;DR: The linear MMSE equalization with parallel interference cancellation for symbol determination in a forward link of a CDMA communication system which has a plurality of code channels in use was proposed in this paper.
Abstract: The present invention provides linear MMSE equalization with parallel interference cancellation for symbol determination in a forward link of a CDMA communication system which has a plurality of code channels in use. Use of the linear MMSE equalization with parallel interference cancellation of the present invention provides significantly increased performance. The preferred method linearly filters a received signal to form a first filtered signal (410), despreads and demodulates the first filtered signal (415, 420) and provides a plurality of symbol estimates for all corresponding code channels (430). An estimated transmitted signal is generated from the plurality of symbol estimates (435), and with a channel estimate (405), an estimated received signal is generated (440). A residual signal is determined as a difference between the received signal and the estimated received signal, is linearly filtered (445), and then combined with the estimated transmitted signal to form a next, enhanced estimated transmitted signal (450). This next estimated transmitted signal is despread (455, 460) and utilized to provide a next plurality of symbol estimates, for a selected code channel of the plurality of channels, for subsequent use in error correction and decoding, and further use by a subscriber (465, 475).

92 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
22 May 2016
TL;DR: With appropriate interference mitigation, dynamic TDD offers a significant gain in data rates as compared to static TDD, which is higher when the BSs are lightly loaded and/or the fraction of UL users is low.
Abstract: In conventional applications of time division duplex (TDD) in cellular systems, the time resource split between uplink (UL) and downlink (DL) is fixed across all base stations (BSs) in the network. This leads to under utilization of BS resources when there is a mismatch between the expected and experienced UL/DL traffic in a given cell. A dynamic split that varies in each cell is desirable, but is challenging due to the high interference experienced by UL receivers in one cell from DL transmissions in adjacent cells. This paper analyzes the performance of UL users in dynamic TDD enabled next generation cellular networks using a stochastic geometry framework. The analysis highlights the trade-off between spectral efficiency and resource utilization for dynamic TDD. With appropriate interference mitigation, dynamic TDD offers a significant gain in data rates as compared to static TDD, which is higher when the BSs are lightly loaded and/or the fraction of UL users is low.

52 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
02 Jun 2013
TL;DR: This paper proposes an extension of the ITU 2D channel model to 3D by adding a distance dependent elevation spread based on observations from ray tracing, observing that the behavior of 3D MIMO is greatly impacted by the modeling of the 3D channel.
Abstract: Recently there have been proposals to extend MIMO processing to the elevation dimension in addition to the azimuth direction. To accurately assess the promised gains of these "3D-MIMO" techniques, a channel model is needed that accurately accounts for the elevation angles of the rays. In addition it would be desirable for the 3D channel model to be a simple extension of an already defined 2D channel model to allow for ease of implementation and to assist the 3GPP standardization effort in the 3D MIMO area. In this paper we propose an extension of the ITU 2D channel model to 3D by adding a distance dependent elevation spread based on observations from ray tracing. Through system-level simulations we observe that the behavior of 3D MIMO is greatly impacted by the modeling of the 3D channel.

49 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A general framework to evaluate the coverage and rate performance in mmWave cellular networks is proposed, and the results show that dense mmWave networks can achieve comparable coverage and much higher data rates than conventional UHF cellular systems, despite the presence of blockages.
Abstract: Millimeter wave (mmWave) holds promise as a carrier frequency for fifth generation cellular networks. Because mmWave signals are sensitive to blockage, prior models for cellular networks operated in the ultra high frequency (UHF) band do not apply to analyze mmWave cellular networks directly. Leveraging concepts from stochastic geometry, this paper proposes a general framework to evaluate the coverage and rate performance in mmWave cellular networks. Using a distance-dependent line-of-site (LOS) probability function, the locations of the LOS and non-LOS base stations are modeled as two independent non-homogeneous Poisson point processes, to which different path loss laws are applied. Based on the proposed framework, expressions for the signal-to-noise-and-interference ratio (SINR) and rate coverage probability are derived. The mmWave coverage and rate performance are examined as a function of the antenna geometry and base station density. The case of dense networks is further analyzed by applying a simplified system model, in which the LOS region of a user is approximated as a fixed LOS ball. The results show that dense mmWave networks can achieve comparable coverage and much higher data rates than conventional UHF cellular systems, despite the presence of blockages. The results suggest that the cell size to achieve the optimal SINR scales with the average size of the area that is LOS to a user.

1,342 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This tutorial article overviews the history of femtocells, demystifies their key aspects, and provides a preview of the next few years, which the authors believe will see a rapid acceleration towards small cell technology.
Abstract: Femtocells, despite their name, pose a potentially large disruption to the carefully planned cellular networks that now connect a majority of the planet's citizens to the Internet and with each other. Femtocells - which by the end of 2010 already outnumbered traditional base stations and at the time of publication are being deployed at a rate of about five million a year - both enhance and interfere with this network in ways that are not yet well understood. Will femtocells be crucial for offloading data and video from the creaking traditional network? Or will femtocells prove more trouble than they are worth, undermining decades of careful base station deployment with unpredictable interference while delivering only limited gains? Or possibly neither: are femtocells just a "flash in the pan"; an exciting but short-lived stage of network evolution that will be rendered obsolete by improved WiFi offloading, new backhaul regulations and/or pricing, or other unforeseen technological developments? This tutorial article overviews the history of femtocells, demystifies their key aspects, and provides a preview of the next few years, which the authors believe will see a rapid acceleration towards small cell technology. In the course of the article, we also position and introduce the articles that headline this special issue.

1,277 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2014
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a comprehensive state-of-the-art survey on SM-MIMO research, to provide a critical appraisal of its potential advantages, and to promote the discussion of its beneficial application areas and their research challenges.
Abstract: A key challenge of future mobile communication research is to strike an attractive compromise between wireless network's area spectral efficiency and energy efficiency. This necessitates a clean-slate approach to wireless system design, embracing the rich body of existing knowledge, especially on multiple-input-multiple-ouput (MIMO) technologies. This motivates the proposal of an emerging wireless communications concept conceived for single-radio-frequency (RF) large-scale MIMO communications, which is termed as SM. The concept of SM has established itself as a beneficial transmission paradigm, subsuming numerous members of the MIMO system family. The research of SM has reached sufficient maturity to motivate its comparison to state-of-the-art MIMO communications, as well as to inspire its application to other emerging wireless systems such as relay-aided, cooperative, small-cell, optical wireless, and power-efficient communications. Furthermore, it has received sufficient research attention to be implemented in testbeds, and it holds the promise of stimulating further vigorous interdisciplinary research in the years to come. This tutorial paper is intended to offer a comprehensive state-of-the-art survey on SM-MIMO research, to provide a critical appraisal of its potential advantages, and to promote the discussion of its beneficial application areas and their research challenges leading to the analysis of the technological issues associated with the implementation of SM-MIMO. The paper is concluded with the description of the world's first experimental activities in this vibrant research field.

1,171 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A survey of existing solutions and standards is carried out, and design guidelines in architectures and protocols for mmWave communications are proposed, to facilitate the deployment of mmWave communication systems in the future 5G networks.
Abstract: With the explosive growth of mobile data demand, the fifth generation (5G) mobile network would exploit the enormous amount of spectrum in the millimeter wave (mmWave) bands to greatly increase communication capacity. There are fundamental differences between mmWave communications and existing other communication systems, in terms of high propagation loss, directivity, and sensitivity to blockage. These characteristics of mmWave communications pose several challenges to fully exploit the potential of mmWave communications, including integrated circuits and system design, interference management, spatial reuse, anti-blockage, and dynamics control. To address these challenges, we carry out a survey of existing solutions and standards, and propose design guidelines in architectures and protocols for mmWave communications. We also discuss the potential applications of mmWave communications in the 5G network, including the small cell access, the cellular access, and the wireless backhaul. Finally, we discuss relevant open research issues including the new physical layer technology, software-defined network architecture, measurements of network state information, efficient control mechanisms, and heterogeneous networking, which should be further investigated to facilitate the deployment of mmWave communication systems in the future 5G networks.

1,041 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The most important shifts in cellular technology in 10-20 years are distilled down to seven key factors, with the implications described and new models and techniques proposed for some, while others are ripe areas for future exploration.
Abstract: Imagine a world with more base stations than cell phones: this is where cellular technology is headed in 10-20 years. This mega-trend requires many fundamental differences in visualizing, modeling, analyzing, simulating, and designing cellular networks vs. the current textbook approach. In this article, the most important shifts are distilled down to seven key factors, with the implications described and new models and techniques proposed for some, while others are ripe areas for future exploration.

952 citations