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Institution

Hewlett-Packard

CompanyPalo Alto, California, United States
About: Hewlett-Packard is a company organization based out in Palo Alto, California, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Signal & Substrate (printing). The organization has 34663 authors who have published 59808 publications receiving 1467218 citations. The organization is also known as: Hewlett Packard & Hewlett-Packard Company.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A study of social interactions within Twitter reveals that the driver of usage is a sparse and hidden network of connections underlying the “declared” set of friends and followers.
Abstract: Scholars, advertisers and political activists see massive online social networks as a representation of social interactions that can be used to study the propagation of ideas, social bond dynamics and viral marketing, among others. But the linked structures of social networks do not reveal actual interactions among people. Scarcity of attention and the daily rythms of life and work makes people default to interacting with those few that matter and that reciprocate their attention. A study of social interactions within Twitter reveals that the driver of usage is a sparse and hidden network of connections underlying the "declared" set of friends and followers.

243 citations

Journal ArticleDOI

242 citations

Patent
Neil Mckee1, Peter Phaal1
28 May 1992
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used burst bursts of packets to determine the characteristics of the transmission path between two nodes in a packet-based network, such as bandwidth, propagation delay, queuing delay and internal packet size.
Abstract: In packet-based networks (10), it is often desired to test communications between two specific stations (11, 12). This can generally be effected from a first one of the stations (11) by requesting the other station (12) to `loop-back` a test packet sent from the first station. The first station (11), on receiving back the test packet, can thereby ascertain that not only is communication with the other station (12) possible, but it can also measure the round trip time. However, more complex characteristics of the transmission path between the stations (11, 12) are not ascertainable in this manner. The transmission of a predetermined sequence of packets permits such characteristics to be determined by observing the effect of the network (10) on the sequence considered as a whole. Thus by varying packet size in a sequence, characteristics such as bandwidth, propagation delay, queuing delay and the network's internal packet size can be derived. The use of bursts of packets enables buffer size and re-sequencing characteristics to be determined.

242 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Simulation results demonstrate that both the video distortion at the decoder and packet loss rate can be significantly reduced when incorporating the channel information provided by the feedback channel and the a priori model into the rate control algorithm.
Abstract: We study the problem of rate control for transmission of video over burst-error wireless channels, i.e., channels such that errors tend to occur in clusters during fading periods. In particular we consider a scenario consisting of packet based transmission with automatic repeat request (ARQ) error control and a back channel. We start by showing how the delay constraints in real time video transmission can be translated into rate constraints at the encoder, where the applicable rate constraints at a given time depend on future channel rates. With the acknowledgments received through the back channel we have an estimate of the current channel state. This information, combined with an a priori model of the channel, allows us to statistically model the future channel rates. Thus the rate constraints at the encoder can be expressed in terms of the expected channel behavior. We can then formalize a rate distortion optimization problem, namely, that of assigning quantizers to each of the video blocks stored in the encoder buffer such that the quality of the received video is maximized. This requires that the rate constraints be included in the optimization, since violating a rate constraint is equivalent to violating a delay constraint and thus results in losing a video block. We formalize two possible approaches. The first one seeks to minimize the distortion for the expected rate constraints given the channel model and current observation. The second approach seeks to allocate bits so as to minimize the expected distortion for the given model. We use both dynamic programming and Lagrangian optimization approaches to solve these problems. Our simulation results demonstrate that both the video distortion at the decoder and packet loss rate can be significantly reduced when incorporating the channel information provided by the feedback channel and the a priori model into the rate control algorithm.

242 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
29 Dec 2000
TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a path diversity transmission system for video communication over lossy packet networks, where the system is composed of two subsystems: (1) multiple state video encoder/decoder and (2) a path-diversity transmission system.
Abstract: Video communication over lossy packet networks such as the Internet is hampered by limited bandwidth and packet loss. This paper presents a system for providing reliable video communication over these networks, where the system is composed of two subsystems: (1) multiple state video encoder/decoder and (2) a path diversity transmission system. Multiple state video coding combats the problem of error propagation at the decoder by coding the video into multiple independently decodable streams, each with its own prediction process and state. If one stream is lost the other streams can still be decoded to produce usable video, and furthermore, the correctly received streams provide bidirectional (previous and future) information that enables improved state recovery for the corrupted stream. This video coder is a form of multiple description coding (MDC), and its novelty lies in its use of information from the multiple streams to perform state recovery at the decoder. The path diversity transmission system explicitly sends different subsets of packets over different paths, as opposed to the default scenarios where the packets proceed along a single path, thereby enabling the end- to-end video application to effectively see an average path behavior. We refer to this as path diversity. Generally, seeing this average path behavior provides better performance than seeing the behavior of any individual random path. For example, the probability that all of the multiple paths are simultaneously congested is much less than the probability that a single path is congested. The resulting path diversity provides the multiple state video decoder with an appropriate virtual channel to assist in recovering from lost packets, and can also simplify system design, e.g. FEC design. We propose two architectures for achieving path diversity, and examine the effectiveness of path diversity in communicating video over a lossy packet network.

241 citations


Authors

Showing all 34676 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Andrew White1491494113874
Stephen R. Forrest1481041111816
Rafi Ahmed14663393190
Leonidas J. Guibas12469179200
Chenming Hu119129657264
Robert E. Tarjan11440067305
Hong-Jiang Zhang11246149068
Ching-Ping Wong106112842835
Guillermo Sapiro10466770128
James R. Heath10342558548
Arun Majumdar10245952464
Luca Benini101145347862
R. Stanley Williams10060546448
David M. Blei98378111547
Wei-Ying Ma9746440914
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20231
202223
2021240
20201,028
20191,269
2018964