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Journal ArticleDOI

Efficiency of packet reservation multiple access

David J. Goodman, +1 more
- 01 Feb 1991 - 
- Vol. 40, Iss: 1, pp 170-176
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TLDR
The influence of several variables on PRMA efficiency, defined as the number of conversations per channel, is examined and it is found that with 32-kb/s speech coding and 720- kb/s transmission (22.5 channels), PRMA supports up to 37 simultaneous conversations, or 1.64 conservations per channel.
Abstract
Packet-reservation multiple access (PRMA) is viewed as a merger of slotted ALOHA and time-division multiple access (TDMA). Dispersed terminals transmit packets of speech information to a central base station. When its speech activity detector indicates the beginning of a talkspurt, a terminal contends with other terminals for access to an available time slot. After the base station detects the first packet in the talkspurt, the terminal reserves future time slots for transmission of subsequent speech packets. The influence of several variables on PRMA efficiency, defined as the number of conversations per channel, is examined. The number of channels is the ratio of transmission rate to speech coding rate. It is found that with 32-kb/s speech coding and 720-kb/s transmission (22.5 channels), PRMA supports up to 37 simultaneous conversations, or 1.64 conservations per channel. The number of conversations per channel is at least 1.5 over a wide range of packet sizes (8 ms of speech per packet to 34 ms) and for all systems with 16 or more channels (transmission rate >or=512 kb/s, with 32-kb/s speech coding). Other factors studied are the sensitivity of the speech activity detector, the retransmission probability of the contention scheme, and the maximum time delay for the transmission of speech packets. >

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Packet reservation multiple access for local wireless communications

TL;DR: Simulation work is reported indicating that packet reservation multiple access (PRMA) allows a variety of information sources to share the same wireless access channel and achieves a promising combination of voice quality and bandwidth efficiency.
Journal ArticleDOI

A model for generating on-off speech patterns in two-way conversation

TL;DR: A model that generates on-off speech patterns representative of those in experimental two-way telephone conversations that yields good fits to all events except “speech before interruption;” when an interruption occurs, a model speaker tends to interrupt the other's talkspurt later than a real speaker does.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bistable Behavior of ALOHA-Type Systems

TL;DR: This paper demonstrates and analyzes an important aspect of the dynamic characteristics of packet radio, namely, that of bistable behavior, which shows that the system possesses two statistically stable equilibrium points, one in a desirable low-delay region, and the other in an undesirable high- delay region.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of Packet Losses in Waveform Coded Speech and Improvements Due to an Odd-Even Sample-Interpolation Procedure

TL;DR: Perceptual considerations indicate that packet lengths most robust to losses are in the range 16-32 ms, irrespective of whether interpolation is used or not, whereas tolerable P L values can be as high as 2 to 5 percent without interpolation and 5 to 10 percent with interpolation.
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