Institution
Alcatel-Lucent
Stuttgart, Germany•
About: Alcatel-Lucent is a based out in Stuttgart, Germany. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Signal & Network packet. The organization has 37003 authors who have published 53332 publications receiving 1430547 citations. The organization is also known as: Alcatel-Lucent S.A. & Alcatel.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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26 Nov 1997TL;DR: A gas plasma process without argon sputtering for removing photoresist, etch residues and other contaminants involved in etching vias in integrated circuit devices is disclosed in this paper, which involves placing the substrate having etched vias or contact holes in a suitable low bias reactor; applying to the substrate surface a mixture of gases at low bias selected from the group consisting of oxygen, nitrogen, fluorine, hydrofluorocarbon and fluorinated methane and amine gases to both remove the photoresists layer and alter the composition of the residues such that the residues are soluble in water
Abstract: A gas plasma process without argon sputtering for removing photoresist, etch residues and other contaminants involved in etching vias in integrated circuit devices is disclosed. The process involves placing the substrate having etched vias or contact holes in a suitable low bias reactor; applying to the substrate surface a mixture of gases at low bias selected from the group consisting of oxygen, nitrogen, fluorine, hydrofluorocarbon and fluorinated methane and amine gases to both remove the photoresist layer and alter the composition of the residues such that the residues are soluble in water; and rinsing the substrate with deionized water. The plasma process should be carried out at temperatures of less than about 100 degrees C. to avoid mobile ion contamination problems and oxidation of the etch residues.
198 citations
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03 Nov 1995TL;DR: In this article, a call-center ACD switch and queuing method are modified to respond to an arriving call by determining, for those splits that could handle the call, the present values of a parameter that defines what is a best split for handling the call and then enqueuing the call in the call queue of the best split, or respond to a call that overflows the primary agent split by determining which backup split in which call center is the best backup split for the call.
Abstract: A call-center ACD switch and queuing method are modified either to respond to an arriving call by determining, for those splits that could handle the call, the present values of a parameter that defines what is a best split for handling the call, determining from those present values which split is the best split for handling the call, and then enqueuing the call in the call queue of the best split, or to respond to a call that overflows the call queue of its primary agent split by determining which backup split in which call center is the best backup split for the call, and enqueuing the call in the call queue of the best backup split. Any desirable criteria may be used to determine the best split. A preferred criterion is queue waiting time: the best split is the one whose call queue offers the shortest in-queue waiting time. The waiting time may be either the real estimated waiting time (EWT), or the EWT weighted for other factors (WEWT) A programmable queuing control function directs the ACD switch to obtain, for each call, the EWTs of the splits, to weight these EWTs in order to obtain the corresponding WEWTs, to compare the WEWTs with each other in order to find the split with the shortest WEWT (the best split), and then to enqueue the call in the queue of this best split.
198 citations
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TL;DR: There are strong correlations between the classifier accuracies and measures of length of class boundaries, thickness of the class manifolds, and nonlinearities of decision boundaries and the bootstrapping method is better when the classes are compact and the boundaries are smooth.
Abstract: Using a number of measures for characterising the complexity of classification problems, we studied the comparative advantages of two methods for constructing decision forests – bootstrapping and random subspaces We investigated a collection of 392 two-class problems from the UCI depository, and observed that there are strong correlations between the classifier accuracies and measures of length of class boundaries, thickness of the class manifolds, and nonlinearities of decision boundaries We found characteristics of both difficult and easy cases where combination methods are no better than single classifiers Also, we observed that the bootstrapping method is better when the training samples are sparse, and the subspace method is better when the classes are compact and the boundaries are smooth
198 citations
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25 Nov 1992TL;DR: In this article, each fibrous strength member is treated with a superabsorbent liquid material, which when dry fills interstices and covers portions of the exterior thereof, and a filamentary strand material comprising a water swellable fibrous material is wrapped about each fiber strength member.
Abstract: A communications cable (20) comprising a core (22) of at least one transmission media and a plastic jacket (34) includes provisions for preventing the movement of water within the cable. The cable includes a strength system (32) including longitudinally extending fibrous strength members (33--33) having a relatively high modulus and having water blocking provisions. In one embodiment, each fibrous strength member is treated with a superabsorbent liquid material which when dry fills interstices and covers portions of the exterior thereof. In another embodiment, a filamentary strand material comprising a water swellable fibrous material is wrapped about each fibrous strength member.
198 citations
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24 May 2000TL;DR: In this paper, serial concatenated turbo codes are used to achieve advantageous error rate performance, high bandwidth efficiency, low delay and reduced error floor at an acceptable level of decoding complexity.
Abstract: Advantageous error rate performance, high bandwidth efficiency, low delay and reduced error floor are achieved at an acceptable level of decoding complexity via the use of serial concatenated turbo codes. These are codes for which at least some of the output bits, including at least one redundant bit, provided by a first, outer encoder are, after interleaving, further processed by a second, inner encoder. The resulting data and redundant bits then select a symbol from a predetermined constellation for transmission. In the receiver, the turbo code is decoded using a corresponding number of soft output decoders which operates iteratively in such a way that improved performance as compared to a single encoding can be achieved. The turbo codes can be a various dimensionalities and can be used as a component of a multilevel code to achieve a desired level of bandwidth efficiency.
198 citations
Authors
Showing all 37011 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
George M. Whitesides | 240 | 1739 | 269833 |
Yoshua Bengio | 202 | 1033 | 420313 |
John A. Rogers | 177 | 1341 | 127390 |
Zhenan Bao | 169 | 865 | 106571 |
Thomas S. Huang | 146 | 1299 | 101564 |
Federico Capasso | 134 | 1189 | 76957 |
Robert S. Brown | 130 | 1243 | 65822 |
Christos Faloutsos | 127 | 789 | 77746 |
Robert J. Cava | 125 | 1042 | 71819 |
Ramamoorthy Ramesh | 122 | 649 | 67418 |
Yann LeCun | 121 | 369 | 171211 |
Kamil Ugurbil | 120 | 536 | 59053 |
Don Towsley | 119 | 883 | 56671 |
Steven P. DenBaars | 118 | 1366 | 60343 |
Robert E. Tarjan | 114 | 400 | 67305 |