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[Keyword] TE(21534hit)

8401-8420hit(21534hit)

  • Static Estimation of the Meteorological Visibility Distance in Night Fog with Imagery

    Romain GALLEN  Nicolas HAUTIERE  Eric DUMONT  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E93-D No:7
      Page(s):
    1780-1787

    In this article, we propose a new way to estimate fog extinction at night with a camera. We also propose a method for the classification of fog depending on the forward scattering. We show that a characterization of fog based on the atmospheric extinction parameter only is not sufficient, specifically in the perspective of adaptive lighting for road safety. This method has been validated on synthetic images generated with a semi Monte-Carlo ray tracing software dedicated to fog simulation as well as with experiments in a fog chamber, we present the results and discuss the method, its potential applications and its limits.

  • People Detection and Re-Identification in Complex Environments

    Dung-Nghi TRUONG CONG  Louahdi KHOUDOUR  Catherine ACHARD  Lounis DOUADI  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E93-D No:7
      Page(s):
    1761-1772

    This paper presents an automatic system for detecting and re-identifying people moving in different sites with non-overlapping views. We first propose an automatic process for silhouette extraction based on the combination of an adaptive background subtraction algorithm and a motion detection module. Such a combination takes advantage of both approaches and is able to tackle the problem of particular environments. The silhouette extraction results are then clustered based on their spatial belonging and colorimetric characteristics in order to preserve only the key regions that effectively represent the appearance of a person. The next important step consists in characterizing the extracted silhouettes by the appearance-based signatures. Our proposed descriptor, which includes both color and spatial feature of objects, leads to satisfying results compared to other descriptors in the literature. Since the passage of a person needs to be characterized by multiple frames, a large quantity of data has to be processed. Thus, a graph-based algorithm is used to realize the comparison of passages of people in front of cameras and to make the final decision of re-identification. The global system is tested on two real and difficult data sets recorded in very different environments. The experimental results show that our proposed system leads to very satisfactory results.

  • Achieving Global Optimal Replication in Distributed Networks

    Yao YU  Yu ZHOU  Kanglian ZHAO  Sidan DU  

     
    LETTER-Network

      Vol:
    E93-B No:7
      Page(s):
    1923-1926

    This letter presents the globally optimal data replication in the distributed networks. We propose a distributed approach based on the metropolis-hastings algorithm to achieve the globally optimal data replication without requiring any global information. Experimental results show that the proposed approach works well and the error can be held below 0.6% easily.

  • Low Phase Noise, 18 kHz Frequency Tuning Step, 5 GHz, 15 bit Digitally Controlled Oscillator in 0.18 µm CMOS Technology

    Ramesh K. POKHAREL  Kenta UCHIDA  Abhishek TOMAR  Haruichi KANAYA  Keiji YOSHIDA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E93-C No:7
      Page(s):
    1007-1013

    A method to realize the fine frequency-tuning steps using tiny capacitors instead of Metal-Insulator-Metal (MIM) capacitors is proposed for a digitally controlled oscillator (DCO). The tiny capacitors are realized by the coplanar transmission lines which are arranged unsymmetrical in a 6 metal layers (M6) foundry of 0.18 µm CMOS technology. These transmission line based capacitors are designed by using electro-magnetic field simulator, and co-designed by using SPICE simulator. Finally, these capacitors are employed to design 15 bit DCO and fabricated the proposed DCO in 0.18 µm CMOS technology, and tested. The measured phase noise of DCO was -118.3 dBc/Hz (@1 MHz offset frequency), and the oscillating frequency tuned from 4.86 GHz to 5.36 GHz in the minimum frequency-tuning step of 18 kHz.

  • Study of Electromagnetic Noise Coupling in Wireless-LAN Communication System

    Mizuki IWANAMI  Hiroshi FUKUDA  Manabu KUSUMOTO  Takashi HARADA  

     
    PAPER-PCB and Circuit Design for EMI Control

      Vol:
    E93-B No:7
      Page(s):
    1776-1780

    This paper shows experimental results of packet error rates (PERs) in wireless-LAN mounted printed circuit boards and gives a discussion on a mechanism of electromagnetic noise coupling that affects the PER. We utilized the amplitude probability distribution to investigate the noise coupling channel. We measured the magnetic near-field distribution to obtain information about noise sources. Based on measurement results, we also performed parallel plate resonance analysis to find out electromagnetic interference antennas. We confirmed that noise radiates from a power supply system of a digital circuit and its coupling to a receiving antenna causes an increase of the PER.

  • Immunity Modeling of Integrated Circuits: An Industrial Case

    Frederic LAFON  Francois DE DARAN  Mohamed RAMDANI  Richard PERDRIAU  M'hamed DRISSI  

     
    PAPER-Chip and Package Level EMC

      Vol:
    E93-B No:7
      Page(s):
    1723-1730

    This paper introduces a new technique for electromagnetic immunity modeling of integrated circuits (ICs), compliant with industrial requirements and valid up to 3 GHz. A specific modeling flow is introduced, which makes it possible to predict the conducted immunity of an IC according to a given criterion, whatever its external environment. This methodology was validated through measurements performed on several devices.

  • Frequency Dependence Measurements of Complex Permittivity of Dielectric Plates Using TE0m1 Modes in a Circular Cavity

    Hossain S. M. NAZARAT  Yoshio KOBAYASHI  Zhewang MA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E93-C No:7
      Page(s):
    1126-1131

    A circular cavity resonance method is improved to measure the frequency dependence of complex permittivity of a dielectric plate by using multimode TE0m1 with integer m. The measurement principle is based on a rigorous analysis by the Ritz-Galerkin method. A new circular cavity with lowered height is designed from a mode chart of a cavity to decrease the number of unwanted modes near the TE0m1 modes. A copper cavity having 20 GHz for the TE011 mode was constructed based on this design. For glass cloth PTFE, RT/duroid 6010 and FR-4 dielectric plates, the frequency dependences are measured from resonant frequencies for the TE0m1 (m = 1, 2, 3 ...) modes. These measured results agree well with ones measured by using the conventional four different size cavities with TE011 mode. It is verified that the designed cavity structure is useful to measure the frequency dependence of low loss dielectric plates.

  • Efficient Method of Achieving Agreements between Individuals and Organizations about RFID Privacy

    Shi-Cho CHA  

     
    PAPER-Information Network

      Vol:
    E93-D No:7
      Page(s):
    1866-1877

    This work presents novel technical and legal approaches that address privacy concerns for personal data in RFID systems. In recent years, to minimize the conflict between convenience and the privacy risk of RFID systems, organizations have been requested to disclose their policies regarding RFID activities, obtain customer consent, and adopt appropriate mechanisms to enforce these policies. However, current research on RFID typically focuses on enforcement mechanisms to protect personal data stored in RFID tags and prevent organizations from tracking user activity through information emitted by specific RFID tags. A missing piece is how organizations can obtain customers' consent efficiently and flexibly. This study recommends that organizations obtain licenses automatically or semi-automatically before collecting personal data via RFID technologies rather than deal with written consents. Such digitalized and standard licenses can be checked automatically to ensure that collection and use of personal data is based on user consent. While individuals can easily control who has licenses and license content, the proposed framework provides an efficient and flexible way to overcome the deficiencies in current privacy protection technologies for RFID systems.

  • Experimental Quasi-Microwave Whole-Body Averaged SAR Estimation Method Using Cylindrical-External Field Scanning

    Yoshifumi KAWAMURA  Takashi HIKAGE  Toshio NOJIMA  

     
    PAPER-Biological Effects and Safety

      Vol:
    E93-B No:7
      Page(s):
    1826-1833

    The aim of this study is to develop a new whole-body averaged specific absorption rate (SAR) estimation method based on the external-cylindrical field scanning technique. This technique is adopted with the goal of simplifying the dosimetry estimation of human phantoms that have different postures or sizes. An experimental scaled model system is constructed. In order to examine the validity of the proposed method for realistic human models, we discuss the pros and cons of measurements and numerical analyses based on the finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) method. We consider the anatomical European human phantoms and plane-wave in the 2 GHz mobile phone frequency band. The measured whole-body averaged SAR results obtained by the proposed method are compared with the results of the FDTD analyses.

  • A Novel Spur Suppression Technique Using Three-Phase Holding Pulse for High-Frequency-Output Direct Digital Synthesizer

    Kenichi TAJIMA  Ryoji HAYASHI  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E93-C No:7
      Page(s):
    1014-1021

    This paper presents a novel spur suppression technique using a three-phase holding pulse for a direct digital synthesizer (DDS) with a two-phase holding digital-to-analog converter (2PH-DAC). A 2PH-DAC, which uses a reverse-sign step-function as a sampling pulse waveform instead of a commonly-used gate function of zeroth-order hold, enhances the first image of aliasing, which is of higher frequency than the fundamental. Therefore, the first image can be treated as a desired signal, while the fundamental and the second image are spurs for a DDS with a 2PH-DAC (2PH-DDS). The main problem of the 2PH-DDS is close spurs in the case that signal frequency is near Nyquist frequency or sampling frequency. This paper proposes a novel spur suppression technique for a 2PH-DDS. A configuration of a 2PH-DDS is first explained, and spectral properties are analyzed. Based on the analysis, a technique using a three-phase holding pulse to cancel spurs is proposed. Evaluated spur levels of the proposed synthesizer are from -51 to -34 dBc, and are improved by 25 dB or more by the proposed technique.

  • High-Speed Low-Complexity Architecture for Reed-Solomon Decoders

    Yung-Kuei LU  Ming-Der SHIEH  

     
    PAPER-Computer System

      Vol:
    E93-D No:7
      Page(s):
    1824-1831

    This paper presents a high-speed, low-complexity VLSI architecture based on the modified Euclidean (ME) algorithm for Reed-Solomon decoders. The low-complexity feature of the proposed architecture is obtained by reformulating the error locator and error evaluator polynomials to remove redundant information in the ME algorithm proposed by Truong. This increases the hardware utilization of the processing elements used to solve the key equation and reduces hardware by 30.4%. The proposed architecture retains the high-speed feature of Truong's ME algorithm with a reduced latency, achieved by changing the initial settings of the design. Analytical results show that the proposed architecture has the smallest critical path delay, latency, and area-time complexity in comparison with similar studies. An example RS(255,239) decoder design, implemented using the TSMC 0.18 µm process, can reach a throughput rate of 3 Gbps at an operating frequency of 375 MHz and with a total gate count of 27,271.

  • Effect of Measurement Distance on Gain Calibration of Pyramidal Horn Antenna

    Katsushige HARIMA  

     
    LETTER

      Vol:
    E93-B No:7
      Page(s):
    1847-1850

    Numerical simulations of the gain and phase center measurements for a pyramidal horn antenna are carried out. The electromagnetic simulation is based on the finite integration method. The gain of horn antennas varies with the distance between their apertures, even if the antennas satisfy the far-field criterion. This gain variation is shown to correspond with the ratio of the distance between the apertures to the distance between the phase centers. The experimental results also demonstrate the efficacy of considering the location of the phase center for antenna calibration.

  • Lightwave Transceivers for Optical Access Systems

    Junichi NAKAGAWA  Masamichi NOGAMI  Masaki NODA  Naoki SUZUKI  Satoshi YOSHIMA  Hitoyuki TAGAMI  

     
    INVITED PAPER

      Vol:
    E93-C No:7
      Page(s):
    1158-1164

    10G-EPON systems have attracted a great deal of attention as a way of exceeding to realize over 10 Gb/s for optical subscriber networking. Rapid burst-mode transmitting/receiving techniques are the key technologies enabling the burst-mode upstream transmission of 10G-EPON systems. In this paper, we have developed a OLT burst-mode 3R receiver incorporating a burst-mode AGC optical receiver and an 82.5 GS/s over-sampling burst-mode CDR and a ONU burst-mode transmitter with high launch power DFB-LD of 1.27 µm wavelength to fully compliant with IEEE802.3av 10G-EPON PR30 standards. The transmitting characteristics of a fast LD turn-on/off time of less than 6ns and a high launch power of more than +8.0 dBm, and the receiving characteristics of receiver sensitivity of -30.1 dBm and the upstream power budget of 38.1 dB are successfully achieved.

  • Tile-Image Merging and Delivering for Virtual Camera Services on Tiled-Display for Real-Time Remote Collaboration

    Giseok CHOE  Jongho NANG  

     
    PAPER-Image Processing and Video Processing

      Vol:
    E93-D No:7
      Page(s):
    1944-1956

    The tiled-display system has been used as a Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW) environment, in which multiple local (and/or remote) participants cooperate using some shared applications whose outputs are displayed on a large-scale and high-resolution tiled-display, which is controlled by a cluster of PC's, one PC per display. In order to make the collaboration effective, each remote participant should be aware of all CSCW activities on the titled display system in real-time. This paper presents a capturing and delivering mechanism of all activities on titled-display system to remote participants in real-time. In the proposed mechanism, the screen images of all PC's are periodically captured and delivered to the Merging Server that maintains separate buffers to store the captured images from the PCs. The mechanism selects one tile image from each buffer, merges the images to make a screen shot of the whole tiled-display, clips a Region of Interest (ROI), compresses and streams it to remote participants in real-time. A technical challenge in the proposed mechanism is how to select a set of tile images, one from each buffer, for merging so that the tile images displayed at the same time on the tiled-display can be properly merged together. This paper presents three selection algorithms; a sequential selection algorithm, a capturing time based algorithm, and a capturing time and visual consistency based algorithm. It also proposes a mechanism of providing several virtual cameras on tiled-display system to remote participants by concurrently clipping several different ROI's from the same merged tiled-display images, and delivering them after compressing with video encoders requested by the remote participants. By interactively changing and resizing his/her own ROI, a remote participant can check the activities on the tiled-display effectively. Experiments on a 32 tiled-display system show that the proposed merging algorithm can build a tiled-display image stream synchronously, and the ROI-based clipping and delivering mechanism can provide individual views on the tiled-display system to multiple remote participants in real-time.

  • Soft Decoding of Integer Codes and Their Application to Coded Modulation

    Hristo KOSTADINOV  Hiroyoshi MORITA  Noboru IIJIMA  A. J. HAN VINCK  Nikolai MANEV  

     
    PAPER-Information Theory

      Vol:
    E93-A No:7
      Page(s):
    1363-1370

    Integer codes are very flexible and can be applied in different modulation schemes. A soft decoding algorithm for integer codes will be introduced. Comparison of symbol error probability (SEP) versus signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) between soft and hard decoding using integer coded modulation shows us that we can obtain at least 2 dB coding gain. Also, we shall compare our results with trellis coded modulation (TCM) because of their similar decoding schemes and complexity.

  • A Switched-Capacitor Boost Converter including Voltage-Mode Threshold Switching

    Hiroyuki NAKAMURA  Toshimichi SAITO  

     
    LETTER-Nonlinear Problems

      Vol:
    E93-A No:7
      Page(s):
    1388-1391

    This paper presents a novel parallel boost converter using switched capacitors The switches are controlled not only by periodic clock but also by voltage-mode threshold that is a key to realize strong stability, fast transient and variable output. The dynamics is described by a piecewise linear equation, the mapping procedure is applicable and the system operation can be analyzed precisely.

  • Approach of Metamaterial-Based Quarter-Wave Resonator and Its Application to Very Compact LTCC Bandpass Filter

    Masaya TAMURA  Toshio ISHIZAKI  Mohammed Reza M. HASHEMI  Tatsuo ITOH  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E93-C No:7
      Page(s):
    1078-1088

    In this paper, a resonator based on composite right/left handed transmission line concept is discussed. This resonator excites --1st order resonance mode. We start with half-wave resonators consisting of two unit cells of a composite right/left handed transmission line. From the simulated field distributions, the center of these half-wave resonators can be short-circuited to obtain a quarter-wave resonator in the --1st mode. Susceptance slope parameters are calculated for the resonator. Then this resonator is applied for a 2-pole filter made by LTCC, which can be designed with standard filter design theory owing to the slope parameter. The dimension of the experimental filter implemented by LTCC is 2.5 mm by 1.35 mm by 0.52 mm. The insertion loss is 1.80 dB at the 2.4 GHz band. Good agreement between measured and computed results is obtained.

  • Suppression of Guard-Trace Resonance by Matched Termination for Reducing Common-Mode Radiation

    Tetsushi WATANABE  Tohlu MATSUSHIMA  Yoshitaka TOYOTA  Osami WADA  Ryuji KOGA  

     
    PAPER-PCB and Circuit Design for EMI Control

      Vol:
    E93-B No:7
      Page(s):
    1746-1753

    We propose a novel technique of matching at both ends of the guard trace to suppress resonance. This approach is derived from the viewpoint that the guard trace acts as a transmission line. We examined that matched termination suppresses guard-trace resonance through simulating a circuit and measuring radiation. We found from these results that the proposed method enables guard-trace voltages to remain low and hence avoids increases in radiation. In addition, we demonstrated that "matched termination at the far end of the guard trace" could suppress guard-trace resonance sufficiently at all frequencies. We eventually found that at least two vias at both ends of the guard trace and only one matching resistor at the far end could suppress guard-trace resonance. With respect to fewer vias, the method we propose has the advantage of reducing restrictions in the printed circuit board layout at the design stage.

  • Dynamic Online Bandwidth Adjustment Scheme Based on Kalai-Smorodinsky Bargaining Solution

    Sungwook KIM  

     
    LETTER-Network Management/Operation

      Vol:
    E93-B No:7
      Page(s):
    1935-1938

    Virtual Private Network (VPN) is a cost effective method to provide integrated multimedia services. Usually heterogeneous multimedia data can be categorized into different types according to the required Quality of Service (QoS). Therefore, VPN should support the prioritization among different services. In order to support multiple types of services with different QoS requirements, efficient bandwidth management algorithms are important issues. In this paper, I employ the Kalai-Smorodinsky Bargaining Solution (KSBS) for the development of an adaptive bandwidth adjustment algorithm. In addition, to effectively manage the bandwidth in VPNs, the proposed control paradigm is realized in a dynamic online approach, which is practical for real network operations. The simulations show that the proposed scheme can significantly improve the system performances.

  • Electromagnetic Bandgap (EBG) Structures Using Open Stubs to Suppress Power Plane Noise

    Hiroshi TOYAO  Noriaki ANDO  Takashi HARADA  

     
    PAPER-PCB and Circuit Design for EMI Control

      Vol:
    E93-B No:7
      Page(s):
    1754-1759

    A novel approach is proposed for miniaturizing the unit cell size of electromagnetic bandgap (EBG) structures that suppress power plane noise. In this approach, open stubs are introduced into the shunt circuits of these EBG structures. Since the stub length determines the resonant frequencies of the shunt circuit, the proposed structures can maintain the bandgaps at lower frequencies without increasing the unit cell size. The bandgap frequencies were estimated by dispersion analysis based on the Bloch theorem and full-wave simulations. Sample boards of the proposed EBG structures were fabricated with a unit cell size of 2.1 mm. Highly suppressed noise propagation over the estimated frequency range of 1.9-3.6 GHz including the 2.4-GHz wireless-LAN band was experimentally demonstrated.

8401-8420hit(21534hit)