K
Kyung Sup Kwak
Researcher at Inha University
Publications - 781
Citations - 15885
Kyung Sup Kwak is an academic researcher from Inha University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognitive radio & Wireless network. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 744 publications receiving 12506 citations.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
The Internet of Things for Health Care: A Comprehensive Survey
TL;DR: An intelligent collaborative security model to minimize security risk is proposed; how different innovations such as big data, ambient intelligence, and wearables can be leveraged in a health care context is discussed; and various IoT and eHealth policies and regulations are addressed to determine how they can facilitate economies and societies in terms of sustainable development.
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Power-Domain Non-Orthogonal Multiple Access (NOMA) in 5G Systems: Potentials and Challenges
TL;DR: This paper comprehensively surveys the recent progress of NOMA in 5G systems, reviewing the state-of-the-art capacity analysis, power allocation strategies, user fairness, and user-pairing schemes in NomA.
Journal ArticleDOI
Power-Domain Non-Orthogonal Multiple Access (NOMA) in 5G Systems: Potentials and Challenges
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors comprehensively survey the recent progress of NOMA in 5G systems, reviewing the state-of-the-art capacity analysis, power allocation strategies, user fairness, and user-pairing schemes in NOMAs.
Journal ArticleDOI
A Comprehensive Survey of Wireless Body Area Networks
Sana Ullah,Henry Higgins,Bart Braem,Benoît Latré,Chris Blondia,Ingrid Moerman,Shahnaz Saleem,Zia Ur Rahman,Kyung Sup Kwak +8 more
TL;DR: The fundamental mechanisms of WBAN including architecture and topology, wireless implant communication, low-power Medium Access Control (MAC) and routing protocols are reviewed and many useful solutions are discussed for each layer.
Journal ArticleDOI
Security and Privacy Issues in Wireless Sensor Networks for Healthcare Applications
TL;DR: A new field known as wireless body area networks (WBAN or simply BAN) has emerged to address the growing use of sensor technology in healthcare applications and security and privacy concerns are discussed.