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Mobile telephony

About: Mobile telephony is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 38008 publications have been published within this topic receiving 553646 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The solution utilizes the user (customer) equipments (UEs) to collect field measurements, including radio measurements and location information, under the work item named Minimization of Drive Tests (MDT).
Abstract: Providing network coverage and quality of service (QoS) is an important task of a cellular network operator. This is because cellular spectrum is normally licensed under certain coverage obligations, and operators need to be competitive in market. To improve their networks, operators often send engineers in the field to collect radio measurements, to discover problems such as coverage holes in the network, and to determine whether certain parameter tuning is needed. However, such conventional "drive tests" require large Operation Expenditure (OPEX), while the collected measurements can only give limited snap shots of the entire network. In their Release 10 (Rel-10) specification, 3GPP studied and specified solutions to reduce this OPEX for drive tests, under the work item named ?Minimization of Drive Tests (MDT)." The solution utilizes the user (customer) equipments (UEs) to collect field measurements, including radio measurements and location information. This article describes in details the solution adopted in 3GPP MDT; how they were developed and intended to be used.

108 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The characteristics of MCS are analyzed, its security threats are identified, and essential requirements on a secure, privacy-preserving, and trustworthy MCS system are outlined.
Abstract: With the popularity of sensor-rich mobile devices (e.g., smart phones and wearable devices), mobile crowdsourcing (MCS) has emerged as an effective method for data collection and processing. Compared with traditional wireless sensor networking, MCS holds many advantages such as mobility, scalability, cost-efficiency, and human intelligence. However, MCS still faces many challenges with regard to security, privacy, and trust. This paper provides a survey of these challenges and discusses potential solutions. We analyze the characteristics of MCS, identify its security threats, and outline essential requirements on a secure, privacy-preserving, and trustworthy MCS system. Further, we review existing solutions based on these requirements and compare their pros and cons. Finally, we point out open issues and propose some future research directions.

108 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe different schemes for augmenting a wired ATM network to support location management of mobile terminals and handoff protocols for rerouting a connection data path when the endpoint moves.
Abstract: Mobile ATM offers a common wired network infrastructure to support mobility of wireless terminals, independent of the wireless access protocol. In addition, it allows seamless migration to future wireless broadband services, such as wireless ATM, by enabling mobility of end-to-end ATM connections. In spite of the diversity in mobile networking technologies (e.g., cellular telephony, mobile-IP, packet data services, PCS), all of them require two fundamental mechanisms: location management and handoff. This article describes different schemes for augmenting a wired ATM network to support location management of mobile terminals and handoff protocols for rerouting a connection data path when the endpoint moves. A prototype implementation of mobile ATM integrating mobility support with ATM signaling and connection setup, is presented. It shows how mobile ATM may be used to provide mobility support to an IP terminal using non-ATM wireless access.

107 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The measurements reveal that LTE can provide coverage for 99 percent of the outdoor and road users, but the LTE-M or NarrowBand-IoT upgrades are required in combination with other measures to allow for additional penetration losses, such as those experienced in underground parking lots.
Abstract: Long Term Evolution, the fourth generation of mobile communication technology, has been commercially deployed for about five years. Even though it is continuously updated through new releases, and with LTE Advanced Pro Release 13 being the latest one, the development of the fifth generation has been initiated. In this article, we measure how current LTE network implementations perform in comparison with the initial LTE requirements. The target is to identify certain key performance indicators that have suboptimal implementations and therefore lend themselves to careful consideration when designing and standardizing next generation wireless technology. Specifically, we analyze user and control plane latency, handover execution time, and coverage, which are critical parameters for connected mobility use cases such as road vehicle safety and efficiency. We study the latency, handover execution time, and coverage of four operational LTE networks based on 19,000 km of drive tests covering a mixture of rural, suburban, and urban environments. The measurements have been collected using commercial radio network scanners and measurement smartphones. Even though LTE has low air interface delays, the measurements reveal that core network delays compromise the overall round-trip time design requirement. LTE's breakbefore- make handover implementation causes a data interruption at each handover of 40 ms at the median level. While this is in compliance with the LTE requirements, and lower values are certainly possible, it is also clear that break-before-make will not be sufficient for connected mobility use cases such as road vehicle safety. Furthermore, the measurements reveal that LTE can provide coverage for 99 percent of the outdoor and road users, but the LTE-M or NarrowBand-IoT upgrades, as of LTE Release 13, are required in combination with other measures to allow for additional penetration losses, such as those experienced in underground parking lots. Based on the observed discrepancies between measured and standardized LTE performance, in terms of latency, handover execution time, and coverage, we conclude the article with a discussion of techniques that need careful consideration for connected mobility in fifth generation mobile communication technology.

107 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The focus of the article is framing the use of mobile technologies in public health from a social marketer’s perspective—using the 4 Ps marketing mix as a guide.
Abstract: Mobile communications are being used for many purposes, from instant messaging (IM), mobile or microblogging (Twitter), social networking sites (Facebook, MySpace), e-mail to basic voicemail. A brief background on cell phone and mobile technology use in public health is reviewed. The focus of the article is framing the use of mobile technologies in public health from a social marketer's perspective--using the 4 Ps marketing mix as a guide.

107 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20242
202351
2022149
2021339
2020558
2019707