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Milica Stojanovic

Researcher at Northeastern University

Publications -  333
Citations -  20043

Milica Stojanovic is an academic researcher from Northeastern University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Underwater acoustic communication & Communication channel. The author has an hindex of 62, co-authored 313 publications receiving 18218 citations. Previous affiliations of Milica Stojanovic include Dana Corporation & Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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Reliable communication using packet coding for underwater acoustic channels

TL;DR: This work investigates reliable data packet delivery employing random linear packet coding for a half-duplex underwater acoustic link and compares the performance of the proposed technique to that of conventional stop-and-wait, as well as a full-du Plex benchmark, showing that packet coding technique on aHalfduplex link can achieve a throughput efficiency that is very close to that that of aFull-duple link.

Simulation and rapid prototyping environment for auv networks

TL;DR: This paper presents a simulation and prototyping environment for connecting multiple AUVs within a network through the very challenging underwater acoustic channel and shows how this process can be improved.
Posted Content

Random Linear Network Coding For Time Division Duplexing: Energy Analysis

TL;DR: In this article, the authors study the energy performance of random linear network coding for time division duplexing channels and show that there is an optimal number of coded data packets to send before stopping to listen, depending on the energy needed to transmit each coded packet and the acknowledgment (ACK), probabilities of packet and ACK erasure, and the number of degrees of freedom that the receiver requires to decode the data.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Joint power and rate control with constrained resources for underwater acoustic channels

TL;DR: This work analyzes a scheme where the number of coded packets to transmit is determined so as to achieve a pre-determined reliability at the receiver, and hence eliminate the need for explicit feedback, and investigates joint power and rate control with constrained resources.

Short Paper: Data Detection Techniques for OFDM Signals over Doppler-Distorted Channels

TL;DR: In this article, partial FFT demodulation is used to reduce inter-carrier interference and error probability in underwater acoustic communications, which results in an improvement of several dB over conventional OFDM detection techniques at the cost of a small increase in complexity.