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[Author] Sung-Joon PARK(4hit)

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  • Power Control of Turbo Coded System in Lognormal Shadowing Channel

    Sung-Joon PARK  

     
    LETTER-Fundamental Theories for Communications

      Vol:
    E91-B No:4
      Page(s):
    1149-1152

    Traditionally, it has been considered that the received signal to noise power ratio should be uniformly preserved to maximize system capacity for uncoded system with reliable feedback channel. However, once channel coding is employed as a building block, another power control scheme presents better performance. In this paper, we consider several power reallocation schemes for an effective use of limited power in a turbo coded system in lognormal shadowing channel. We show that the proposed power reallocation can reduce the decoding error probability by almost two orders of magnitude and provide a power gain of 0.87 dB at a target bit error rate of 10-4 over the equal power allocation among all code symbols. We also propose applying different power levels and cut-off thresholds on systematic and parity bits, and investigate the effect of channel estimation error.

  • Context-Dependent Phoneme Duration Modeling with Tree-Based State Tying

    Sung-Joon PARK  Myoung-Wan KOO  Chu-Shik JHON  

     
    LETTER-Speech and Hearing

      Vol:
    E88-D No:3
      Page(s):
    662-666

    This letter presents two methods of modeling phoneme durations. One is the context-independent phoneme duration modeling in which duration parameters are stored in each phoneme. The other is the context-dependent duration modeling in which duration parameters are stored in each state shared by context-dependent phonemes. The phoneme duration model is compared with a without-duration model and a state duration model. Experiments are performed on a database collected over the telephone network. Experimental results show that duration information rejects out-of-task (OOT) words well and that the context-dependent duration model yields the best performance among the tested models.

  • Irregular Triangular Quadrature Amplitude Modulations

    Sung-Joon PARK  

     
    PAPER-Fundamental Theories for Communications

      Vol:
    E97-B No:7
      Page(s):
    1358-1364

    The recently suggested regular-type triangular quadrature amplitude modulation (TQAM) provides considerable power gain over square quadrature amplitude modulation (SQAM) at the expense of a slight increase in detection complexity. However, the power gain of the TQAM is limited due to the constraint that signal points should be regularly located at the vertexes of contiguous equilateral triangles. In this paper, we investigate two irregular (optimum and suboptimum) TQAMs where signal points are irregularly distributed while preserving the equilateral triangular lattice, and calculate achievable power gains of the proposed constellations. We also address optimum and suboptimum bit stream mapping methods and suggest a simple and optimum detection method for the constellations to be meaningful in practical implementation, and present analytical and simulation results. The proposed constellations can provide the asymptotic power gains of 0.825dB and 0.245dB over SQAM and regular TQAM, respectively.

  • Power Control of Turbo Coded System in Rayleigh Fading Channel

    Sung-Joon PARK  

     
    LETTER-Fundamental Theories for Communications

      Vol:
    E90-B No:1
      Page(s):
    144-147

    We propose reallocating the power resource among the code symbols in such a way to minimize the post decoding error probability of turbo code. We consider several power reallocation policies and investigate their performance in slowly-varying Rayleigh flat fading channel. We show that the proposed scheme can reduce the post decoding error probability by two orders of magnitude and provide a power gain of 0.86 dB at BER=10-6 over the traditional equal power allocation among all code symbols. We also propose applying different power levels and cut-off thresholds on systematic and parity check bits depending on the channel gain, and investigate the effect of channel gain estimation error.