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Communication channel

About: Communication channel is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 137411 publications have been published within this topic receiving 1715077 citations. The topic is also known as: communication channel & communications channel.


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Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 2010
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a review of state-dependent event-triggering in embedded control, networked control systems, distributed estimation, and distributed optimization, and present a systematic way of triggering transmissions that provides some guarantees on overall control system performance.
Abstract: Networked control systems often send information across the communication network in a periodic manner. The selected period, however, must assure adequate system performance over a wide range of operating conditions and this conservative’ choice may result in significant over-provisioning of the communication network. This observation has motivated the use of sporadic transmission across the network’s feedback channels. Event-triggering represents one way of generating such sporadic transmissions. In event-triggered feedback, a sensor transmits when some internal measure of the novelty in the sensor information exceeds a specified threshold. In particular, this means that when the gap between the current and the more recently transmitted sensor measurements exceeds a state-dependent threshold, then the information is transmitted across the channel. The state-dependent thresholds are chosen in a way that preserves commonly used stability concepts such as input-to-state stability or \({\mathcal L}_2\) stability. This approach for threshold selection therefore provides a systematic way of triggering transmissions that provides some guarantees on overall control system performance. While early work in event-triggering focused on control applications, this technique can also be used in distributed estimation and distributed optimization. This chapter reviews recent progress in the use of state-dependent event-triggering in embedded control, networked control systems, distributed estimation, and distributed optimization.

252 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Corvus corone module two-way image transmission is proposed that provides energy efficiency along CS model, secured transmission through a matrix of security under CS such as inbuilt method, which was named as compressed secured matrix and faultless reconstruction along that of eminent random matrix counting under CS.
Abstract: The manufacturing of intelligent and secure visual data transmission over the wireless sensor network is key requirement nowadays to many applications. The two-way transmission of image under a wireless channel needed image must compatible along channel characteristics such as band width, energy-efficient, time consumption and security because the image adopts big space under the device of storage and need a long time that easily undergoes cipher attacks. Moreover, Quizzical the problem for the additional time under compression results that, the secondary process of the compression followed through the acquisition consumes more time.,Hence, for resolving these issues, compressive sensing (CS) has emerged, which compressed the image at the time of sensing emerges as a speedy manner that reduces the time consumption and saves bandwidth utilization but fails under secured transmission. Several kinds of research paved path to resolve the security problems under CS through providing security such as the secondary process.,Thus, concerning the above issues, this paper proposed the Corvus corone module two-way image transmission that provides energy efficiency along CS model, secured transmission through a matrix of security under CS such as inbuilt method, which was named as compressed secured matrix and faultless reconstruction along that of eminent random matrix counting under CS.,Experimental outputs shows intelligent module gives energy efficient, secured transmission along lower computational timing also decreased bit error rate.

252 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A comprehensive analysis of the effects of wireless channel hostilities on the convergence rate of the proposed FEEL scheme is provided, showing that the hostilities slow down the convergence of the learning process by introducing a scaling factor and a bias term into the gradient norm.
Abstract: Federated edge learning (FEEL) is a popular framework for model training at an edge server using data distributed at edge devices (e.g., smart-phones and sensors) without compromising their privacy. In the FEEL framework, edge devices periodically transmit high-dimensional stochastic gradients to the edge server, where these gradients are aggregated and used to update a global model. When the edge devices share the same communication medium, the multiple access channel (MAC) from the devices to the edge server induces a communication bottleneck. To overcome this bottleneck, an efficient broadband analog transmission scheme has been recently proposed, featuring the aggregation of analog modulated gradients (or local models) via the waveform-superposition property of the wireless medium. However, the assumed linear analog modulation makes it difficult to deploy this technique in modern wireless systems that exclusively use digital modulation. To address this issue, we propose in this work a novel digital version of broadband over-the-air aggregation, called one-bit broadband digital aggregation (OBDA). The new scheme features one-bit gradient quantization followed by digital quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) at edge devices and over-the-air majority-voting based decoding at edge server. We provide a comprehensive analysis of the effects of wireless channel hostilities (channel noise, fading, and channel estimation errors) on the convergence rate of the proposed FEEL scheme. The analysis shows that the hostilities slow down the convergence of the learning process by introducing a scaling factor and a bias term into the gradient norm. However, we show that all the negative effects vanish as the number of participating devices grows, but at a different rate for each type of channel hostility.

252 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
23 Apr 2006
TL;DR: This work proposes an efficient client-based approach for channel management (channel assignment and load balancing) in 802.11-based WLANs that lead to better usage of the wireless spectrum that is based on a “conflict set coloring” formulation that jointly performs load balancing along with channel assignment.
Abstract: We propose an efficient client-based approach for channel management (channel assignment and load balancing) in 802.11-based WLANs that lead to better usage of the wireless spectrum. This approach is based on a “conflict set coloring” formulation that jointly performs load balancing along with channel assignment. Such a formulation has a number of advantages. First, it explicitly captures interference effects at clients. Next, it intrinsically exposes opportunities for better channel re-use. Finally, algorithms based on this formulation do not depend on specific physical RF models and hence can be applied efficiently to a wide-range of in-building as well as outdoor scenarios. We have performed extensive packet-level simulations and measurements on a deployed wireless testbed of 70 APs to validate the performance of our proposed algorithms. We show that in addition to single network scenarios, the conflict set coloring formulation is well suited for channel assignment where multiple wireless networks share and contend for spectrum in the same physical space. Our results over a wide range of both simulated topologies and in-building testbed experiments indicate that our approach improves application level performance at the clients by upto three times (and atleast 50%) in comparison to current best-known techniques.

252 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202270
20214,425
20206,535
20197,160
20187,052
20176,315