Yohei FUKUMIZU Shuji OHNO Makoto NAGATA Kazuo TAKI
A highly collision-resistive RFID system multiplexes communications between thousands of tags and a single reader in combination with time-domain multiplexing code division multiple access (TD-CDMA), CRC error detection, and re-transmission for error recovery. The collision probability due to a random selection of CDMA codes and TDMA channels bounds the number of IDs successfully transmitted to a reader during a limited time frame. However, theoretical analysis showed that the re-transmission greatly reduced the collision probability and that an ID error rate of 2.510-9 could be achieved when 1,000 ID tags responded within a time frame of 400 msec in ideal communication channels. The proposed collision-resistive communication scheme for a thousand multiplexed channels was modeled on a discrete-time digital expression and an FPGA-based emulator was built to evaluate a practical ID error rate under the presence of background noise in communication channels. To achieve simple anti-noise communication in a multiple-response RFID system, as well as unurged re-transmission of ID data, adjusting of correlator thresholds provides a significant improvement to the error rate. Thus, the proposed scheme does not require a reader to request ID transmission to erroneously responding tags. A reader also can lower noise influence by using correlator thresholds, since the scheme multiplexes IDs by CDMA-based communication. The effectiveness of the re-transmission was confirmed experimentally even in noisy channels, and the ID error rate derived from the emulation was 1.910-5. The emulation was useful for deriving an optimum set of RFID system parameters to be used in the design of mixed analog and digital integrated circuits for RFID communication.
It has been observed in the literature that the characteristic polynomial of a discrete system can be computed from the characteristic impulse response Gramian. In this letter it is shown that a given characteristic impulse response Gramian, in fact, contains information on two characteristic polynomials. The importance of this result is illustrated through an application to model reduction of discrete systems.
Yasuo SUZUKI Ichihiko TOYODA Masahiro UMEHIRA
The interference imposed on conventional narrow-band systems by impulse radio UWB (IR-UWB) signals is examined by simulations. The Dirac delta function is employed to model the IR-UWB signal to reduce simulation costs. The simulation results show that the statistical characteristics of this interference deviate from Gaussian noise when the frequency band of the narrow-band system includes a half multiple of the data symbol rate of the IR-UWB system. In the case of pulse-position-modulation UWB signals and biorthogonal-coded bipolar-modulation UWB signals, the performance degradation of the narrow-band system depends on the number of pulse positions and the number of orthogonal codes, respectively.
Sung-Hak LEE Soo-Wook JANG Eun-Su KIM Sang-Hoon LEE Kyu-Ik SOHNG
The pulsed backlight system has been introduced for reducing motion blurs of LCDs in high motion pictures. But applying the pulsed backlight, full screen flicker and inconsistency of transmissivity for entire frame at a lightening time should be considered. This paper discusses the analysis of blurs in high motion pictures and proposes the design method for more suitable display terminal of LCDs.
In this paper, we discuss the role of physical (PHY) layer in realization of energy-aware wireless communication systems. With an energy consumption model for a wireless link between a transmitter and a receiver, we discuss a dominant factor to reduce energy consumption and show that, to reduce energy consumption, we should adopt an energy-efficient circuit architecture and modulation/detection scheme, even allowing a little degradation of packet error rate. Finally, we show that wide band signal transmission has a potential to realize not only high data rate transmission but also low energy consumption in wireless communication systems.
Kenji KAWAKAMI Hiroshi IKEMATSU Koichi MATSUO Naohisa UEHARA Moriyasu MIYAZAKI Tadashi TAKAGI
This paper describes a millimeter-wave pulse transmitter with a 38 GHz-band Voltage Controlled Oscillator (VCO) and a 77/38 GHz-band harmonic mixer. This harmonic mixer works as both of a pulse modulator and a multiplier. This configuration of the transmitter is very simple, and can be applied to high-speed pulse modulation like Ultra Wide Band. By using the harmonic mixer, furthermore, a fluctuation of the load impedance of the 38 GHz VCO can be reduced. Compared with the conventional configuration, the required amount of isolation between the VCO and the load has been able to be reduced by more than 30 dB as a result of the experiment in a millimeter-wave band.
A new impulse noise detection algorithm is presented, which can successfully remove impulse noise from corrupted images while preserving image details. The impulse detection algorithm is combined with median filtering to achieve noise removal. The main advantage of the proposed algorithm is that it can detect the impulse noise with high accuracy while reducing the probability of detecting image details as impulses. Also, it can be applied iteratively to improve the quality of restored images. It is efficient and low in complexity. Furthermore, it requires no previous training. Extensive experimental results show that the proposed approach significantly outperforms many well-known techniques.
We considered pulse width dependence in a time-spreading Optical Code Division Multiplexing (OCDM) system using a phase encoder and decoder (127-chip, time-spreading 800 ps) by simulation. It follows that in a fully asynchronous OCDM transmission, the light source pulse width had a 20 ps degree of freedom.
Kiyoshi HAMAGUCHI Hiroyo OGAWA Takehiko KOBAYASHI Ryuji KOHNO
This paper introduces a state-of-art on an ultra-wideband (UWB) technology in intelligent transport systems (ITS). To examine the detection performance of a UWB short-range radar for vehicular applications, we developed a 26-GHz band short-range UWB radar system with an embedded compact MMIC-based RF module. In this paper, we briefly comment on the current regulatory environment for UWB radar systems by outlining the structure of an international organization involved in examining the regulatory status of these systems. We then describe the principles of detection and system design for impulse radar, the radar system that we developed, and a MMIC-based RF module as well as the performance of these devices. We measured their performance in a series of laboratory experiments and also measured UWB radar cross sections of an automobile. The results of our experiments suggest that our radar system is capable of detecting targets with a range resolution of around 9 cm.
Mitsuhiro MATSUO Masaru KAMADA Hiromasa HABUCHI
The present paper discusses a new construction of UWB pulses within the framework of soft-spectrum adaptation. The employed basis functions are B-splines having the following properties: (i) The B-splines are time-limited piecewise polynomials. (ii) The first-order B-splines are rectangular pulses and they converge band-limited functions at the limit that their order tends to infinity. (iii) There are an analog circuit and a fast digital filter for the generation of B-splines. Simple application of Gram-Schmidt orthonormalization process to the shifted B-splines results in a few basic pulses, which are well time-limited and have a broad band width, but do not comply with the FCC spectral mask. A constrained approximation technique is proposed for adaptively designing pulses so that they approximate target frequency characteristics. At the cost of using eleven shifted B-splines, an example set of four pulses comforting the FCC spectral mask is obtained.
The transient scattering characteristics of millimeter waves from a cylindrical object near a flat boundary were measured by the 50 GHz scatterometer to evaluate the multiple interactions of scattered waves with the objects and the boundary. Both perfectly conducting and dielectric cylinders are considered as a scattering object. The pulse intensities including waves scattered first from the object and then from the flat boundary or vice versa are shown to be significantly influenced by the distance from the object to the boundary, depending on the refractive index of the object. The observed higher order responses including the multiple scattering between the object and the boundary are also discussed. A preliminary comparison of the measured and calculated pulse responses for the perfectly conducting object is presented at slightly oblique incidence on a flat boundary.
Mohammad Azizur RAHMAN Shigenobu SASAKI Jie ZHOU Hisakazu KIKUCHI
Performance of Rake reception of Ultra Wideband (UWB) signals is evaluated from energy capture perspective. In addition to ordinary all Rake (ARake) and selective Rake (SRake) receivers which are considered in conventional spread spectrum communications, we introduce optimum ARake and SRake receivers which include the estimation of delay of the combining multipaths. Impact of pulse-width is discussed on their performances considering the relationship between pulse-width and fading. Time hopping M-ary pulse position modulation (TH-MPPM) and binary phase shift keying (TH-BPSK) are considered as modulation schemes. Extensive simulation results are presented showing the performances of the Rakes introduced using IEEE 802.15.3a UWB channel models (CM1 to CM3). Performance of MPPM is shown for various values of M and modulation parameters. The impact of pulse-width is illustrated mainly using BPSK. It is shown that the total energy capture (i.e. by ARake) strongly depends on the pulse-width, and the shorter the pulse-width the more is the amount. The energy capture also varies a lot for employing either optimum or ordinary Raking method. Energy capture by SRake additionally strongly depends on the number of combined paths until the number is 20 for optimum SRake and 10 for ordinary SRake; however, afterwards saturating effects are seen. Several aspects regarding the performance versus complexity issue of Rake receivers are also discussed.
An impulse generation circuit using an SRD was made as an experiment. The circuit, which is used for UWB pulse radars, etc., was designed using PSpice, a SPICE simulator. Since there is no SRD model in SPICE, the pn junction model was substituted. The experimental and simulated waveforms were compared, and could be made almost to match by adjusting the parameters of the SPICE diode model.
Jinsung OH Changhoon LEE Younam KIM
In this paper, we present a minimum-maximum exclusive weighted-mean filtering algorithm with adaptive window. Image pixels within the varying size of the window are ranked and classified as minimum-maximum and median levels, and then passed through the weighted-mean of median level and identity filters, respectively. The filtering window size is adaptively increasing according to noise ratio without noise measurement. Extensive simulations show that the proposed filter performs better than other median/rank-type filters in removing impulse noise of highly corrupted images.
Stephane CIOLINO Mohammad GHAVAMI Hamid AGHVAMI
This paper proposes wavelet packets for use in ultra wideband communications. The pulse shapes that are generated are quasi orthogonal and have almost identical time duration. After normalization, an M-ary signaling set can be constructed allowing higher data rate. Finally, the performance of such a system when multipath propagation occurs is investigated by computer simulations. In order to combat multipath fading, a Rake receiver using coherent channel estimation is designed. This channel estimation is carried out using adaptive algorithms such as least-mean square (LMS), normalized least-mean square (NLMS), or recursive least square (RLS) algorithms which adapt the received signal given a reference signal.
Yoshifumi KOBAYASHI Hidehiro NAKANO Toshimichi SAITO
This letter studies a simple nonautonomous chaotic circuit constructed by adding an impulsive switch to the RCL circuit. The switch operation depends on time and on state variable through a refractory threshold. The circuit exhibits various chaotic attractors, periodic attractors and related bifurcation phenomena. The dynamics can be analyzed using 1-D return map focusing on the time-dependent switching moments. Using a simple test circuit model typical phenomena are verified in PSPICE simulations.
Craig J. MITCHELL Giuseppe ABREU Ryuji KOHNO
In this paper we present a novel method for improving RAKE receiver reception in UWB systems. Due to the fact that practical pulses that can be produced for UWB-IR (Ultra Wideband-Impulse Radio) may occupy a longer time than the typical multipath resolution of the actual UWB channel, multiple channel components may arrive within this typical pulse width. Performance degradation may occur due to the resulting intrapulse (overlapping received pulses) interference. We here propose an adaptive, pilot aided RAKE receiver for UWB communications in the multipath environment. The proposed system estimates the actual received signal with intrapulse interference in each RAKE finger using projections onto a Hadamard-Hermite subspace. By exploiting the orthogonality of this subspace it is possible to decompose the received signal so as to better match the template waveform and reduce the effects of intrapulse interference. By using the projections onto this subspace, the dimension of the received signal is effectively increased allowing for adaptive correlator template outputs. RAKE receivers based on this proposal are designed which show significant performance improvement and require less fingers to achieve required performance than their conventional counterparts.
Yeong-Hyeon KWON Mi-Kyung OH Dong-Jo PARK
This paper presents a new transmission scheme of M-ary biorthogonal pulse position modulation (BPPM) in ultra wideband systems. The proposed scheme incorporates position-wise parity information to improve the probability of symbol detection over multipath channels. A linear filter-based channel modification is also introduced to mitigate multipath degradation and maximize the probability of symbol detection by using parity information. The analytical and numerical results show that the proposed scheme achieves a significant improvement of symbol error rate (SER) with very low computational complexity and no symbol delay.
In recent years, there has been an increased focus on the mechanics of information transmission in spiking neural networks. Especially the Noise Shaping properties of these networks and their similarity to Delta-Sigma Modulators has received a lot of attention. However, very little of the research done in this area has focused on the effect the weights in these networks have on the Noise Shaping properties and on post-processing of the network output signal. This paper concerns itself with the various modes of network operation and beneficial as well as detrimental effects which the systematic generation of network weights can effect. Also, a method for post-processing of the spiking output signal is introduced, bringing the output signal more in line with conventional Delta-Sigma Modulators. Relevancy of this research to industrial application of neural nets as building blocks of oversampled A/D converters is shown. Also, further points of contention are listed, which must be thoroughly researched to add to the above mentioned applicability of spiking neural nets.
Hiroshi SHIMAZU Toshimichi SAITO
This paper studies dynamics of a delta modulator for PWM control. In order to analyze the circuit dynamics we derive a one-dimensional return map of switching time. The map is equivalent to a circle map in wide parameter region and its nonperiodic behavior corresponds to undesired asynchronous operation of the circuit. We then present a simple stabilization method of the system operations by means of periodic compulsory switching. The mechanism of the stabilization is considered from viewpoints of bifurcation. Using a simple test circuit, typical operations are confirmed experimentally.