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[Keyword] ERO(858hit)

261-280hit(858hit)

  • Interference Rejection Characteristics by Adaptive Array at User Equipment Using Measured K-Factor in Heterogeneous Networks

    Kentaro NISHIMORI  Keisuke KUSUMI  Misaki HORIO  Koshiro KITAO  Tetsuro IMAI  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E96-B No:6
      Page(s):
    1256-1264

    In LTE-Advanced heterogeneous networks, a typical cell layout to enhance frequency utilization is to incorporate picocells and femtocells in a macrocell. However, the co-channel interference between the marcocell and picocell/femtocell is an important issue when the same frequency band is used between these systems. We have already clarified how the interference from the femto(macro) cell affects on the macro(femto) cell. In this paper, we evaluate the interference rejection characteristics by an adaptive array with user equipment (UE). The characteristics are evaluated based on the K-factor used in the Nakagami-Race Fading model and the spatial correlation that is obtained in an actual outdoor environment. It is shown that a two-element adaptive array at the macro UE (M-UE) can sufficiently reduce the interference from the femto base station (F-BS) to the M-UE even if the number of total signals exceeds the degrees of freedom of the array.

  • A Reduced-Complexity Heterodyne Multiband MIMO Receiver with Estimation of Analog Devices Imperfection in a Baseband Feedback Loop

    Tomoya OHTA  Satoshi DENNO  Masahiro MORIKURA  

     
    PAPER-Wireless Communication Technologies

      Vol:
    E96-B No:6
      Page(s):
    1540-1550

    This paper proposes a reduced-complexity multiband multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) receiver that can be used in cognitive radios. The proposed receiver uses heterodyne reception implemented with a wide-passband band-pass filter in the radio frequency (RF) stage. When an RF Hilbert transformer is utilized in the receiver, image-band interference occurs because of the transformer's imperfections. Thus, the imperfection of the Hilbert transformer is corrected in the intermediate frequency (IF) stage to reduce the hardware complexity. First, the proposed receiver estimates the channel impulse response in the presence of the strong image-band interference signals. Next, the coefficients are calculated for the correction of the imperfection at the IF stage, and are fed back to the IF stage through a feedback loop. However, the imperfection caused by the digital-to-analog (D/A) converter and the baseband amplifier in the feedback loop corrupts the coefficients on the way back to the IF stage. Therefore, the proposed receiver corrects the imperfection of the analog devices in the feedback loop. The performance of the proposed receiver is verified by using computer simulations. The proposed receiver can maintain its performance even in the presence of strong image-band interference signals and imperfection of the analog devices in the feedback loop. In addition, this paper also reveals the condition for rapid convergence.

  • Efficient Resource Utilization for Heterogeneous Wireless Personal Area Networks

    Abolfazl MEHBODNIYA  Sonia AÏSSA  Fumiyuki ADACHI  

     
    PAPER-Terrestrial Wireless Communication/Broadcasting Technologies

      Vol:
    E96-B No:6
      Page(s):
    1577-1587

    Wireless personal area networks (WPANs) will play an important role in next-generation communication networks. Currently, two technologies are being considered for the physical layer of WPANs, based on the two ultra wideband (UWB) standards, namely, multiband orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (MB-OFDM) UWB and direct-sequence (DS) UWB. The coexistence issue of these two types of WPANs in the same coverage area, raises new issues and introduces new problems which should be dealt with to avoid performance degradation. In particular, efficient radio resource management (RRM) in such environments is challenging. Indeed, the coexistence of heterogenous UWB based WPANs (UPANs) has an ad hoc nature, which requires RRM approaches that are different from traditional infrastructure-based ones. In this paper, we propose new algorithms for two RRM modules in heterogeneous UPANs, namely, radio access technology (RAT) selection and vertical handoff (VHO). To improve the overall performance of the system, our design considers possible narrowband interference (NBI) in the environment as well as the link outage probability, in the decision process. We also provide an analytical model based on a 4D Markov process to study the system in equilibrium and derive the performance metrics, namely, the new-call and handoff-call blocking probabilities, throughput and average carried traffic. Numerical results and comparisons show that our design achieves enhanced performance in terms of throughput and grade of service (GoS).

  • Selection of Component Carriers Using Centralized Baseband Pooling for LTE-Advanced Heterogeneous Networks

    Hiroyuki SEKI  Takaharu KOBAYASHI  Dai KIMURA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E96-B No:6
      Page(s):
    1288-1296

    Bandwidth expansion in Long Term Evolution (LTE)-Advanced is supported via carrier aggregation (CA), which aggregates multiple component carriers (CCs) to accomplish very high data rate communications. Heterogeneous networks (HetNets), which set pico-base stations in macrocells are also a key feature of LTE-Advanced to achieve substantial gains in coverage and capacity compared to macro-only cells. When CA is applied in HetNets, transmission on all CCs may not always be the best solution due to the extremely high levels of inter-cell interference experienced by HetNets. Activated CCs that are used for transmission should be selected depending on inter-cell interference conditions and the traffic offered in the cells. This paper presents a scheme to select CCs through centralized control assuming a centralized baseband unit (C-BBU) configuration. A C-BBU involves pooling tens or hundreds of baseband resources where one baseband resource can be connected to any CC installed in remote radio heads (RRHs) via optical fibers. Fewer baseband resources can be prepared in a C-BBU than those of CCs in RRHs to reduce the cost of equipment. Our proposed scheme selects the activated CCs by considering the user equipment (UE) assigned to CCs under the criterion of maximizing the proportional fairness (PF) utility function. Convex optimization using the Karush-Kuhn-Tucker (KKT) conditions is applied to solve the resource allocation ratio that enables user throughput to be estimated. We present results from system level simulations of the downlink to demonstrate that the proposed algorithm to select CCs can outperform the conventional one that selects activated CCs based on the received signal strength. We also demonstrate that our proposed algorithm to select CCs can provide a good balance in traffic load between CCs and achieve better user throughput with fewer baseband resources.

  • Performance Evaluation of Interference Rejection Combining Receiver in Heterogeneous Networks for LTE-Advanced Downlink

    Yusuke OHWATARI  Akihito MORIMOTO  Nobuhiko MIKI  Yukihiko OKUMURA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E96-B No:6
      Page(s):
    1265-1276

    The interference rejection combining (IRC) receiver effectively improves the cell-edge user throughput by suppressing interference from the surrounding cells. The work item (WI) for the specification of the IRC receiver is now ongoing for Release 11 Long-Term Evolution (LTE)-Advanced. Furthermore, heterogeneous networks where low power nodes such as picocells are overlaid onto macrocells are important to further improve the system throughput per unit area. In heterogeneous networks, to achieve an offloading gain from macrocells to picocells, cell range expansion (CRE) is applied. Additionally, inter-cell interference coordination (ICIC) is applied to reduce the severe inter-cell interference imposed from the macrocells onto the sets of user equipment (UEs) connected to picocells. In such cases, the interference statistics are completely different from traditional well-planned macrocell deployments, which have been investigated for the IRC receiver. This paper clarifies the effect of the IRC receiver in a heterogeneous network employing CRE and ICIC. Simulation results show that when both CRE and ICIC are applied, the effect of the IRC receiver becomes small due to a reduction in the severe inter-cell interference from ICIC. However, we clarify that the user throughput gain at the cumulative distribution function of 5% from the IRC receiver exceeding 10% is achieved compared to the conventional minimum mean square error (MMSE) receiver in a heterogeneous network regardless of the usage of ICIC. Furthermore, in heterogeneous networks employing CRE and ICIC, we clarify that an average user throughput gain exceeding 5% is achieved from the IRC receiver and the improvement in the average user throughput is high especially for the UEs connected to picocells compared to UEs connected to macrocells.

  • Performance Evaluation of LTE-Advanced Heterogeneous Network Deployment Using Carrier Aggregation between Macro and Small Cells

    Takahiro TAKIGUCHI  Kohei KIYOSHIMA  Yuta SAGAE  Kengo YAGYU  Hiroyuki ATARASHI  Sadayuki ABETA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E96-B No:6
      Page(s):
    1297-1305

    This paper evaluates the downlink performance of an LTE-Advanced (LTE-A) heterogeneous network that uses carrier aggregation (CA) between macro and small cells. The concept of utilizing the CA functionalities in LTE-A is effective in increasing the network capacity in a congested area through raising of the base station density using small cells overlaid onto an existing macro cell network. This concept is also effective in maintaining the mobility performance of user equipment (UE) because handover operation is not applied when entering/leaving a small cell, but component carrier addition/removal is only performed through CA while maintaining the connection to a macro cell. In order to present comprehensive performance evaluations in an LTE-A heterogeneous network with CA, this paper evaluates various performance criteria, e.g., downlink cell throughput and downlink user throughput. According to the obtained simulation results, the total downlink cell throughput achieved in an LTE-A heterogeneous network deployment with CA (four small cells overlaid onto a macro cell sector) exhibits a 3.9-fold improvement compared to a conventional-macro-cell-only network deployment using two frequency bands.

  • Investigation of Inter-Cell Interference Coordination Applying Transmission Power Reduction in Heterogeneous Networks for LTE-Advanced Downlink

    Akihito MORIMOTO  Nobuhiko MIKI  Yukihiko OKUMURA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E96-B No:6
      Page(s):
    1327-1337

    In Long-Term Evolution (LTE)-Advanced, heterogeneous networks are important to further improve the system throughput per unit area. In heterogeneous network deployment, low power nodes such as picocells are overlaid onto macrocells. In the downlink, the combined usage of inter-cell interference coordination (ICIC), which is a technique that reduces the severe interference from macrocells by reducing the transmission power or stopping the transmission from the macrocells, and cell range expansion (CRE), which is a technique that expands the cell radius of picocells by biasing the received signal power, is very effective in improving the system and cell-edge user throughput. In this paper, we consider two types of ICIC. The first one reduces the transmission power from the macrocells (referred to as reduced power ICIC) and the second one stops the transmission from the macrocells (referred to as zero power ICIC). This paper investigates the impact of the reduction in the transmission power when using reduced power ICIC and the restriction on the modulation scheme caused by the reduction in the transmission power when using reduced power ICIC on the user throughput performance with the CRE offset value as a parameter. In addition, the throughput performance when applying reduced power ICIC is compared to that when applying zero power ICIC. Simulation results show that the user throughput with reduced power ICIC is not sensitive to the protected subframe ratio compared to that with zero power ICIC even if the modulation scheme is restricted to only QPSK in the protected subframes. This indicates that reduced power ICIC is more robust than zero power ICIC for non-optimum protected subframe ratios.

  • Analysis on Effectiveness of TDM Inter-Cell Interference Coordination in Heterogeneous Networks

    Masashi FUSHIKI  Noriaki MIYAZAKI  Xiaoqiu WANG  Satoshi KONISHI  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E96-B No:6
      Page(s):
    1318-1326

    In order to support the increasing amount of mobile data traffic, Third Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) is actively discusses cell range expansion (CRE) and time domain multiplexing – inter-cell interference coordination (TDM-ICIC). They have shown to be attractive techniques for heterogeneous network (HetNet) deployment where pico base stations (BSs) overlay macro BSs. There are two control schemes of the TDM-ICIC. One, named ZP-scheme, stops radio resource assignments for data traffic in predetermined radio resources in the time domain (subframes). The other, named RP-scheme, maintains the resource assignment whereas it reduces the transmission power at macro BSs at predetermined subframes. In this paper, we clarify the effective ranges of both ZP-scheme and RP-scheme by conducting the system level simulations. Moreover, the appropriate power reduction value at predetermined subframes is also clarified from the difference in the effective range of various power reduction values. The comprehensive evaluation results show that both ZP-scheme and RP-scheme are not effective when the CRE bias value is 0 dB or less. If the CRE bias value is larger than 0 dB, they are effective when the ratio of predetermined subframes in all subframes is set to appropriate values. These values depend on the CRE bias value and power reduction in the predetermined subframes. The effective range is expanded when the power reduction in the predetermined subframes changes with the CRE bias value. Therefore, the effective range of RP-scheme is larger than that of ZP-scheme by setting an appropriate power reduction in the predetermined subframes.

  • A Simple Scheduling Restriction Scheme for Interference Coordinated Networks

    Moo Ryong JEONG  Nobuhiko MIKI  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E96-B No:6
      Page(s):
    1306-1317

    Scheduling restriction is attracting much attention in LTE-Advanced as a technique to reduce the power consumption and network overheads in interference coordinated heterogeneous networks (HetNets). Such a network with inter-cell interference coordination (ICIC) provides two radio resources with different channel quality statistics. One of the resources is protected (unprotected) from inter-cell interference (hence, called protected (non-protected) resource) and has higher (lower) average channel quality. Without scheduling restriction, the channel quality feedback would be doubled to reflect the quality difference of the two resources. We present a simple scheduling restriction scheme that addresses the problem without significant performance degradation. Users with relatively larger (smaller) average channel quality difference between the two resources are scheduled in the protected (non-protected) resource only, and a boundary user, determined by a proportional fair resource allocation (PFRA) under simplified static channels, is scheduled on one of the two resources or both depending on PFRA. Having most users scheduled in only one of the resources, the power consumption and network overheads that would otherwise be required for the channel quality feedback on the other resource can be avoided. System level simulation of LTE-Advanced downlink shows that the performance degradation due to our scheduling restriction scheme is less than 2%, with the average feedback reduction of 40%.

  • On the Performance of Dynamic Spectrum Access Schemes for Emergency Communication Systems

    Peng HAN  Hua TIAN  Zhensong ZHANG  Wei XIE  

     
    PAPER-Terrestrial Wireless Communication/Broadcasting Technologies

      Vol:
    E96-B No:6
      Page(s):
    1597-1604

    A wireless emergency communication network with a fixed allocation of spectrum resources cannot meet the tremendous demand for spectrum access when a crisis occurs. It is necessary to develop an effective spectrum access scheme to improve the performance of emergency communication systems. In this paper, we study a new emergency communication system combines cognitive radio technology and an emergency communication network. Emergency users can utility resources in a general network when traffic becomes congested in an emergency network. Non-reciprocal spectrum access scheme (NRA) and reciprocal spectrum access scheme (RA) for two heterogeneous cognitive networks, namely emergency network and general network are proposed to compare with traditional spectrum access scheme (TA). User behavior with each scheme is modeled by continuous-time Markov chains. Moreover, the blocking and dropping probabilities of users in two heterogeneous cognitive networks are derived as the performance metrics. In addition, the throughput and the spectrum utilization rate of the system are evaluated. Finally, we compare the performance of three dynamic spectrum access schemes. The simulation results show that the RA scheme is an effective scheme to enhance the performance of emergency systems.

  • Interference Mitigation in CR-Enabled Heterogeneous Networks Open Access

    Shao-Yu LIEN  Shin-Ming CHENG  Kwang-Cheng CHEN  

     
    INVITED PAPER

      Vol:
    E96-B No:6
      Page(s):
    1230-1242

    The heterogeneous network (HetNet), which deploys small cells such as picocells, femotcells, and relay nodes within macrocell, is regarded as a cost-efficient and energy-efficient approach to resolve increasing demand for data bandwidth and thus has received a lot of attention from research and industry. Since small cells share the same licensed spectrum with macrocells, concurrent transmission induces severe interference, which causes performance degradation, particularly when coordination among small cell base stations (BSs) is infeasible. Given the dense, massive, and unplanned deployment of small cells, mitigating interference in a distributed manner is a challenge and has been explored in recent papers. An efficient and innovative approach is to apply cognitive radio (CR) into HetNet, which enables small cells to sense and to adapt to their surrounding environments. Consequently, stations in each small cell are able to acquire additional information from surrounding environments and opportunistically operate in the spectrum hole, constrained by minimal inducing interference. This paper summarizes and highlights the CR-based interference mitigation approaches in orthogonal frequency division multiple access (OFDMA)-based HetNet networks. With special discussing the role of sensed information at small cells for the interference mitigation, this paper presents the potential cross-layer facilitation of the CR-enable HetNet.

  • Effect of Cell Range Expansion to Handover Performance for Heterogeneous Networks in LTE-Advanced Systems

    Koichiro KITAGAWA  Toshiaki YAMAMOTO  Satoshi KONISHI  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E96-B No:6
      Page(s):
    1367-1376

    Cell Range Expansion (CRE) is a promising technique for the enhancement of traffic offload to pico cells. CRE is realized by adjusting the trigger timing of handover (HO) toward/from pico cells. However, inappropriate setting of trigger timing results in HO failures or Ping-Pong HOs. Both the HO failures and the Ping-Pong HOs degrade the continuity of user data services. Therefore, when CRE is applied, both the HO failures and the Ping-Pong HOs should be kept suppressed in order to guarantee the continuity of services for users. However, in the conventional studies, the application of CRE is discussed without consideration of HO performance. This paper clarifies the application range of CRE from the perspective of HO performance by taking the HO failure rates and the Ping-Pong HO rates as HO performance measures. As an example, we reveal that there is an appropriate CRE bias values which keep both the HO failure rate and Ping-Pong HO rate less than 1%. Such an appropriate CRE bias value range is smaller than the one without consideration of HO performance, which is reported in the conventional studies. The authors also observed that Ping-Pong HO occurs due to the short staying time of users at pico cells in high velocity environment. The rate of such Ping-Pong HOs becomes more than about 1% when the user velocity is more than 60 km/h. Therefore, it is more difficult in high velocity environment than that in low velocity environment to find appropriate CRE bias values.

  • Optimization of Picocell Locations and Its Parameters in Heterogeneous Networks with Hotspots

    Hidekazu SHIMODAIRA  Gia Khanh TRAN  Kei SAKAGUCHI  Kiyomichi ARAKI  Shoji KANEKO  Noriaki MIYAZAKI  Satoshi KONISHI  Yoji KISHI  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E96-B No:6
      Page(s):
    1338-1347

    In recent years, heterogeneous cellular network (HetNet) topology has been attracting much attention. HetNet, which is a network topology with low power base stations installed inside the cell range of conventional macrocells, can realize network capacity enhancement through the effects of macrocell offloading and cell shrinkage. Due to the heterogeneity nature of HetNet, network designers should carefully consider about the interference management, resource allocation, user association and cell range expansion. These issues have been well studied in recent literatures. However, one of the important problems which has not been well investigated in conventional works is the base station (BS) deployment problem in HetNet. This paper investigates the optimal pico base station deployment in heterogeneous cellular networks especially with the existence of hotspots. In this paper, pico BS locations are optimized together with other network parameters including spectrum splitting ratio and signal-to-interference-noise ratio (SINR) bias for cell range expansion to maximize the total system rate, by considering two spectrum allocation strategies, i.e. spectrum overlapping and spectrum splitting. Numerical results show that the optimized pico BS locations can improve the system rate, the average user rate and outage user rate in HetNet with hotspots.

  • Comprehensive Analysis of Heterogeneous Networks with Pico Cells in LTE-Advanced Systems Open Access

    Satoshi KONISHI  

     
    INVITED PAPER

      Vol:
    E96-B No:6
      Page(s):
    1243-1255

    We have seen a rapid increase in mobile data traffic in cellular networks, especially in densely populated areas called “hotspots.” In order to deal with this trend, heterogeneous networks (HetNet) are attracting much attention as a method of effectively accommodating such traffic increases using the Long Term Evolution (LTE)-Advanced system in the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP). This paper first presents an overview of HetNet, where various wireless nodes can be deployed over the coverage area formed by macro base stations (BSs). Next, various evaluation results are provided for HetNet, where pico BSs (“Pico-BSs”) are deployed over the coverage area of macro BSs (“Macro-BSs”). Then, this paper presents a comprehensive analysis, not only of the effect of overlaying Pico-BSs but also a detailed analyses of the techniques called “cell range expansion (CRE)” and “enhanced inter-cell interference coordination (eICIC)” for facilitating the offloading of user terminals (UEs) from Macro-BSs to Pico-BSs and mitigating interference, respectively, for both downlink and uplink. Noteworthy outcomes found through the comprehensive study are that CRE provides throughput improvements for uplinks, especially for UE connected to Pico-BSs. In addition, this paper demonstrates that CRE contributes to improving downlink throughput especially for low traffic loads. The outcome regarding eICIC is that eICIC provides improvements in total throughput, in spite of the fact that eICIC causes unfairness between UE connected to the Pico-BSs and those with Macro-BSs.

  • Improvement of the Range Impulse Response Function of a Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar

    Min-Ho KA  Aleksandr I. BASKAKOV  Anatoliy A. KONONOV  

     
    PAPER-Sensing

      Vol:
    E96-B No:5
      Page(s):
    1187-1193

    A method for the specification of weighting functions for a spaceborne/airborne interferometric synthetic aperture radar (SAR) sensor for Earth observation and environment monitoring is introduced. This method is based on designing an optimum mismatched filter which minimizes the total power in sidelobes located out of a specified range region around the peak value point of the system point-target response, i.e. impulse response function under the constraint imposed on the peak value. It is shown that this method allows achieving appreciable improvement in accuracy performance without degradation in the range resolution.

  • X-Ray Photoemission Study of SiO2/Si/Si0.55Ge0.45/Si Heterostructures

    Akio OHTA  Katsunori MAKIHARA  Seiichi MIYAZAKI  Masao SAKURABA  Junichi MUROTA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E96-C No:5
      Page(s):
    680-685

    An SiO2/Si-cap/Si0.55Ge0.45 heterostructure was fabricated on p-type Si(100) and strained silicon on insulator (SOI) substrates by low pressure chemical vapor deposition (LPCVD) and subsequent thermal oxidation in an O2 + H2 gas mixture. Chemical bonding features and valence band offsets in the heterostructures were evaluated by using high-resolution x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) measurements and thinning the stack layers with a wet chemical solution.

  • Rigorous Design and Analysis of Tunneling Field-Effect Transistor with Hetero-Gate-Dielectric and Tunneling-Boost n-Layer

    Jae Hwa SEO  Jae Sung LEE  Yun Soo PARK  Jung-Hee LEE  In Man KANG  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E96-C No:5
      Page(s):
    644-648

    A gate-all-around tunneling field-effect transistor (GAA TFET) with local high-k gate-dielectric and tunneling-boost n-layer based on silicon is demonstrated by two dimensional (2D) device simulation. Application of local high-k gate-dielectric and n-layer leads to reduce the tunneling barrier width between source and intrinsic channel regions. Thus, it can boost the on-current (Ion) characteristics of TFETs. For optimal design of the proposed device, a tendency of device characteristics has been analyzed in terms of the high-k dielectric length (Lhigh-k) for the fixed n-layer length (Ln-layer). The simulation results have been analyzed in terms of on- and off-current (Ion and Ioff), subthreshold swing (SS), and RF performances.

  • Investigation on Transmission Power Control Suitable for Heterogeneous Network Employing Cell Range Expansion in LTE-Advanced Uplink

    Akihito MORIMOTO  Nobuhiko MIKI  Hiroyuki ISHII  Daisuke NISHIKAWA  Yukihiko OKUMURA  

     
    PAPER-Wireless Communication Technologies

      Vol:
    E96-B No:4
      Page(s):
    1051-1060

    In Long-Term Evolution (LTE)-Advanced, heterogeneous networks where femtocells and picocells are overlaid onto macrocells are being extensively discussed in addition to traditional well-planned macrocell deployment to improve further the system throughput. In heterogeneous networks, cell range expansion (CRE), which is a technique for expanding the cell radius of picocells by biasing the handover criteria, e.g., the downlink received signal power, is applied so that the UEs will more frequently select the picocells. This paper investigates a fractional transmission power control (TPC) method suitable for the heterogeneous networks that employ CRE in the LTE-Advanced uplink and evaluates the cell-edge user throughput and cell throughput performance. Simulation results (2-8 picocells and 25 (30) UEs are located within one macrocell with a uniform (cluster) distribution, the difference in transmission power between the macro and picocells is 16 dB, and the Typical Urban and Pedestrian-A channel models are employed) show that almost the same cell-edge user throughput is obtained by setting an appropriate difference in the target received signal power between the macro and picocells according to the CRE offset value.

  • All-Zero Block-Based Optimization for Quadtree-Structured Prediction and Residual Encoding in High Efficiency Video Coding

    Guifen TIAN  Xin JIN  Satoshi GOTO  

     
    PAPER-Digital Signal Processing

      Vol:
    E96-A No:4
      Page(s):
    769-779

    High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC) outperforms H.264 High Profile with bitrate saving of about 43%, mostly because block sizes for hybrid prediction and residual encoding are recursively chosen using a quadtree structure. Nevertheless, the exhaustive quadtree-based partition is not always necessary. This paper takes advantage of all-zero residual blocks at every quadtree depth to accelerate the prediction and residual encoding processes. First, we derive a near-sufficient condition to detect variable-sized all-zero blocks (AZBs). For these blocks, discrete cosine transform (DCT) and quantization can be skipped. Next, using the derived condition, we propose an early termination technique to reduce the complexity for motion estimation (ME). More significantly, we present a two-dimensional pruning technique based on AZBs to constrain prediction units (PU) that contribute negligibly to rate-distortion (RD) performance. Experiments on a wide range of videos with resolution ranging from 416240 to 4k2k, show that the proposed scheme can reduce computational complexity for the HEVC encoder by up to 70.46% (50.34% on average), with slight loss in terms of the peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR) and bitrate. The proposal also outperforms other state-of-the-art methods by achieving greater complexity reduction and improved bitrate performance.

  • Label-Free and Noninvasive Monitoring of Cell Differentiation on Spheroid Microarray

    Hidenori OTSUKA  Masako NAGAMURA  Akie KANEKO  Koichi KUTSUZAWA  Toshiya SAKATA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E96-C No:3
      Page(s):
    353-357

    A two-dimensional microarray of ten thousand (100100) chondrocyte-spheroids was successfully constructed with a 100-µm spacing on a micropatterned gold electrodes that were coated with poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) hydrogels. The PEGylated surface as a cytophobic region was regulated by controlling the gel structure through photolithography. In this way, a PEG hydrogel was modulated enough to inhibit outgrowth of chondrocytes from cell adhering region in the horizontal direction. These structural control of PEG hydrogel was critical for inducing formation of three-dimensional chondrocyte condensations (spheroids) within 24 hours. We report noninvasive monitoring of the cellular functional change at the cell membrane using a chondrocyte-based field effect transistor (FET), which is based on detection of extracellular potential change induced as a result of the interaction between extracellular matrix (ECM) protein secreted from spheroid and substrate at the cell membrane. The interface potential change at the cell membrane/gate insulator interface can be monitored during the uptake of substrate without any labeling materials. Our findings on the time course of the interface potential would provide important information to understand the uptake kinetics for cellular differentiation.

261-280hit(858hit)