Institution
Stevens Institute of Technology
Education•Hoboken, New Jersey, United States•
About: Stevens Institute of Technology is a education organization based out in Hoboken, New Jersey, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Computer science & Cognitive radio. The organization has 5440 authors who have published 12684 publications receiving 296875 citations. The organization is also known as: Stevens & Stevens Tech.
Topics: Computer science, Cognitive radio, Communication channel, Wireless network, Artificial neural network
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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01 Jun 1980TL;DR: Results of research in areas of potential interest for optical communications are surveyed: novel fiber-optic components, integrated optics (sources and modulators/switches), novel device fabrication methods, and integration of optical components.
Abstract: Current trends in research and development of components for optical communication are reviewed. Emphasis is placed on active components for fiber-optic systems which have undergone recent major advances. Basic properties of optical fibers and recent technological improvements in splices, connectors, and source/detector-fiber couplers are presented first. This background information serves as a basis for describing recent developments in optical sources (e.g., device reliability, LED's and laser diodes) and photodetectors. Developments in both the 0.8-0.9-µm and 1.0-1.7-µm wavelength regions are covered. Also surveyed are results of research in areas of potential interest for optical communications: novel fiber-optic components, integrated optics (sources and modulators/switches), novel device fabrication methods, and integration of optical components.
77 citations
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21 Mar 2011TL;DR: A speed tracking technique that uses a Derivative Dynamic Time Warping (DDTW) algorithm to realign a given signal profile with a known training profile from the same road and translates the warping path into an estimated speed trace.
Abstract: In this paper, we consider the problem of tracking fine-grained speeds variations of vehicles using signal strength traces from GSM enabled phones. Existing speed estimation techniques using mobile phone signals can provide longer-term speed averages but cannot track short-term speed variations. Understanding short-term speed variations, however, is important in a variety of traffic engineering applications—for example, it may help distinguish slow speeds due to traffic lights from traffic congestion when collecting real time traffic information. Using mobile phones in such applications is particularly attractive because it can be readily obtained from a large number of vehicles. Our approach is founded on the observation that the large-scale path loss and shadow fading components of signal strength readings (signal profile) obtained from the mobile phone on any given road segment appear similar over multiple trips along the same road segment except for distortions along the time axis due to speed variations. We therefore propose a speed tracking technique that uses a Derivative Dynamic Time Warping (DDTW) algorithm to realign a given signal profile with a known training profile from the same road. The speed tracking technique then translates the warping path (i.e., the degree of stretching and compressing needed for alignment) into an estimated speed trace. Using 6.4 hours of GSM signal strength traces collected from a vehicle, we show that our algorithm can estimate vehicular speed with a median error of ± 5mph compared to using a GPS and can capture significant speed variations on road segments with a precision of 68% and a recall of 84%.
77 citations
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21 Aug 2009TL;DR: In this article, an expandable intervertebral fusion cage that includes an inferior baseplate and a superior baseplate, an insert rotated relative to the guide pin, and a guide pin coupled to the inferior and superior baseplates for facilitating the rotation of the insert is presented.
Abstract: An expandable intervertebral fusion cage that includes an inferior baseplate and a superior baseplate, an insert rotatbly received between the inferior and superior baseplates, and a guide pin coupled to the inferior and superior baseplates for facilitating the rotation of the insert. The insert includes a pair of protuberances, each of which are releasably engageable with a corresponding lock groove formed within the inferior and superior baseplates. When said insert is rotated relative to the guide pin, the protuberances engage the lock grooves, and the inferior and superior baseplates expand from a collapsed position, in which said inferior and superior baseplates are juxtaposed with one another, and an expanded position, in which said inferior and superior baseplates are diverged away from one another. As a result, the cage distracts in parallel. Tabs formed on the superior baseplate continuously engage slots formed within the inferior baseplate when the baseplates expand from their collapsed position to their expanded position.
77 citations
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08 Dec 2008TL;DR: This paper model the spectrum band switching game where the networks try to minimize their cost in finding a clear band and proposes a mixed strategy that the competing networks must adhere to in order to achieve the Nash equilibrium.
Abstract: The cognitive radio based IEEE 802.22 wireless regional area network (WRAN) is designed to operate in the under-utilized TV bands by detecting and avoiding primary TV transmission bands in a timely manner. Such networks, deployed by competing wireless service providers, would have to self-coexist by accessing different parts of the available spectrum in a distributed manner. Obviously, the goal of every network is to acquire a clear spectrum chunk free of interference from other IEEE 802.22 networks so as to satisfy the QoS of the services delivered to the end-users. In this paper, we study the distributed WRAN self-coexistence problem from a minority game theoretic perspective. We model the spectrum band switching game where the networks try to minimize their cost in finding a clear band. We propose a mixed strategy that the competing networks must adhere to in order to achieve the Nash equilibrium. Simulation experiments have also been conducted and results corroborate with the theoretical analysis.
77 citations
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TL;DR: This paper showed that high level irradiation leads to preferential formation of trans β-lactams in several cases when the Schiff base is derived from an aryl aldehyde rather than glyceraldehyde acetonide.
77 citations
Authors
Showing all 5536 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Paul M. Thompson | 183 | 2271 | 146736 |
Roger Jones | 138 | 998 | 114061 |
Georgios B. Giannakis | 137 | 1321 | 73517 |
Li-Jun Wan | 113 | 639 | 52128 |
Joel L. Lebowitz | 101 | 754 | 39713 |
David Smith | 100 | 994 | 42271 |
Derong Liu | 77 | 608 | 19399 |
Robert R. Clancy | 77 | 293 | 18882 |
Karl H. Schoenbach | 75 | 494 | 19923 |
Robert M. Gray | 75 | 371 | 39221 |
Jin Yu | 74 | 480 | 32123 |
Sheng Chen | 71 | 688 | 27847 |
Hui Wu | 71 | 347 | 19666 |
Amir H. Gandomi | 67 | 375 | 22192 |
Haibo He | 66 | 482 | 22370 |