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Description
With the formation of next generation wireless communication, a growing number of new applications like internet of things, autonomous car, and drone is crowding the unlicensed spectrum. Licensed network such as LTE also comes to the unlicensed spectrum for better providing high-capacity contents with low cost. However, LTE was not

With the formation of next generation wireless communication, a growing number of new applications like internet of things, autonomous car, and drone is crowding the unlicensed spectrum. Licensed network such as LTE also comes to the unlicensed spectrum for better providing high-capacity contents with low cost. However, LTE was not designed for sharing spectrum with others. A cooperation center for these networks is costly because they possess heterogeneous properties and everyone can enter and leave the spectrum unrestrictedly, so the design will be challenging. Since it is infeasible to incorporate potentially infinite scenarios with one unified design, an alternative solution is to let each network learn its own coexistence policy. Previous solutions only work on fixed scenarios. In this work we present a reinforcement learning algorithm to cope with the coexistence between Wi-Fi and LTE-LAA agents in 5 GHz unlicensed spectrum. The coexistence problem was modeled as a Dec-POMDP and Bayesian approach was adopted for policy learning with nonparametric prior to accommodate the uncertainty of policy for different agents. A fairness measure was introduced in the reward function to encourage fair sharing between agents. We turned the reinforcement learning into an optimization problem by transforming the value function as likelihood and variational inference for posterior approximation. Simulation results demonstrate that this algorithm can reach high value with compact policy representations, and stay computationally efficient when applying to agent set.
ContributorsSHIH, PO-KAN (Author) / Moraffah, Bahman (Thesis advisor) / Papandreou-Suppappola, Antonia (Thesis advisor) / Dasarathy, Gautam (Committee member) / Shih, YiChang (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Lattice-based Cryptography is an up and coming field of cryptography that utilizes the difficulty of lattice problems to design lattice-based cryptosystems that are resistant to quantum attacks and applicable to Fully Homomorphic Encryption schemes (FHE). In this thesis, the parallelization of the Residue Number System (RNS) and algorithmic efficiency of

Lattice-based Cryptography is an up and coming field of cryptography that utilizes the difficulty of lattice problems to design lattice-based cryptosystems that are resistant to quantum attacks and applicable to Fully Homomorphic Encryption schemes (FHE). In this thesis, the parallelization of the Residue Number System (RNS) and algorithmic efficiency of the Number Theoretic Transform (NTT) are combined to tackle the most significant bottleneck of polynomial ring multiplication with the hardware design of an optimized RNS-based NTT polynomial multiplier. The design utilizes Negative Wrapped Convolution, the NTT, RNS Montgomery reduction with Bajard and Shenoy extensions, and optimized modular 32-bit channel arithmetic for nine RNS channels to accomplish an RNS polynomial multiplication. In addition to a full software implementation of the whole system, a pipelined and optimized RNS-based NTT unit with 4 RNS butterflies is implemented on the Xilinx Artix-7 FPGA(xc7a200tlffg1156-2L) for size and delay estimates. The hardware implementation achieves an operating frequency of 47.043 MHz and utilizes 13239 LUT's, 4010 FF's, and 330 DSP blocks, allowing for multiple simultaneously operating NTT units depending on FGPA size constraints.
ContributorsBrist, Logan Alan (Author) / Chakrabarti, Chaitali (Thesis advisor) / Papandreou-Suppappola, Antonia (Committee member) / Bliss, Daniel (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020
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Description
This research presents advances in time-synchronized phasor (i.e.,synchrophasor) estimation and imaging with very-low-frequency electric fields. Phasor measurement units measure and track dynamic systems, often power systems, using synchrophasor estimation algorithms. Two improvements to subspace-based synchrophasor estimation algorithms are shown. The first improvement is a dynamic thresholding method for accurately determining the signal subspace

This research presents advances in time-synchronized phasor (i.e.,synchrophasor) estimation and imaging with very-low-frequency electric fields. Phasor measurement units measure and track dynamic systems, often power systems, using synchrophasor estimation algorithms. Two improvements to subspace-based synchrophasor estimation algorithms are shown. The first improvement is a dynamic thresholding method for accurately determining the signal subspace when using the estimation of signal parameters via rotational invariance techniques (ESPRIT) algorithm. This improvement facilitates accurate ESPRIT-based frequency estimates of both the nominal system frequency and the frequencies of interfering signals such as harmonics or out-of-band interference signals. Proper frequency estimation of all signals present in measurement data allows for accurate least squares estimates of synchrophasors for the nominal system frequency. By including the effects of clutter signals in the synchrophasor estimate, interference from clutter signals can be excluded. The result is near-flat estimation error during nominal system frequency changes, the presence of harmonic distortion, and out-of-band interference. The second improvement reduces the computational burden of the ESPRIT frequency estimation step by showing that an optimized Eigenvalue decomposition of the measurement data can be used instead of a singular value decomposition. This research also explores a deep-learning-based inversion method for imaging objects with a uniform electric field and a 2D planar D-dot array. Using electric fields as an illumination source has seen multiple applications ranging from medical imaging to mineral deposit detection. It is shown that a planar D-dot array and deep neural network can reconstruct the electrical properties of randomized objects. A 16000-sample dataset of objects comprised of a three-by-three grid of randomized dielectric constants was generated to train a deep neural network for predicting these dielectric constants from measured field distortions. Increasingly complex imaging environments are simulated, ranging from objects in free space to objects placed in a physical cage designed to produce uniform electric fields. Finally, this research relaxes the uniform electric field constraint, showing that the volume of an opaque container can be imaged with a copper tube antenna and a 1x4 array of D-dot sensors. Real world experimental results show that it is possible to image buckets of water (targets) within a plastic shed These experiments explore the detectability of targets as a function of target placement within the shed.
ContributorsDrummond, Zachary (Author) / Allee, David R (Thesis advisor) / Claytor, Kevin E (Committee member) / Papandreou-Suppappola, Antonia (Committee member) / Aberle, James (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Infants born before 37 weeks of pregnancy are considered to be preterm. Typically, preterm infants have to be strictly monitored since they are highly susceptible to health problems like hypoxemia (low blood oxygen level), apnea, respiratory issues, cardiac problems, neurological problems as well as an increased chance of long-term health

Infants born before 37 weeks of pregnancy are considered to be preterm. Typically, preterm infants have to be strictly monitored since they are highly susceptible to health problems like hypoxemia (low blood oxygen level), apnea, respiratory issues, cardiac problems, neurological problems as well as an increased chance of long-term health issues such as cerebral palsy, asthma and sudden infant death syndrome. One of the leading health complications in preterm infants is bradycardia - which is defined as the slower than expected heart rate, generally beating lower than 60 beats per minute. Bradycardia is often accompanied by low oxygen levels and can cause additional long term health problems in the premature infant.The implementation of a non-parametric method to predict the onset of brady- cardia is presented. This method assumes no prior knowledge of the data and uses kernel density estimation to predict the future onset of bradycardia events. The data is preprocessed, and then analyzed to detect the peaks in the ECG signals, following which different kernels are implemented to estimate the shared underlying distribu- tion of the data. The performance of the algorithm is evaluated using various metrics and the computational challenges and methods to overcome them are also discussed.
It is observed that the performance of the algorithm with regards to the kernels used are consistent with the theoretical performance of the kernel as presented in a previous work. The theoretical approach has also been automated in this work and the various implementation challenges have been addressed.
ContributorsMitra, Sinjini (Author) / Papandreou-Suppappola, Antonia (Thesis advisor) / Moraffah, Bahman (Thesis advisor) / Turaga, Pavan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020
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Description
The recent proposal of two-way relaying has attracted much attention due to its promising features for many practical scenarios. Hereby, two users communicate simultaneously in both directions to exchange their messages with the help of a relay node. This doctoral study investigates various aspects of two-way relaying. Specifically, the issue

The recent proposal of two-way relaying has attracted much attention due to its promising features for many practical scenarios. Hereby, two users communicate simultaneously in both directions to exchange their messages with the help of a relay node. This doctoral study investigates various aspects of two-way relaying. Specifically, the issue of asynchronism, lack of channel knowledge, transmission of correlated sources and multi-way relaying techniques involving multiple users are explored.

With the motivation of developing enabling techniques for two-way relay (TWR) channels experiencing excessive synchronization errors, two conceptually-different schemes are proposed to accommodate any relative misalignment between the signals received at any node. By designing a practical transmission/detection mechanism based on orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM), the proposed schemes perform significantly better than existing competing solutions. In a related direction, differential modulation is implemented for asynchronous TWR systems that lack the channel state information (CSI) knowledge. The challenge in this problem compared to the conventional point-to-point counterpart arises not only from the asynchrony but also from the existence of an interfering signal. Extensive numerical examples, supported by analytical work, are given to demonstrate the advantages of the proposed schemes.

Other important issues considered in this dissertation are related to the extension of the two-way relaying scheme to the multiple-user case, known as the multi-way relaying. First, a distributed source coding solution based on Slepian-Wolf coding is proposed to compress correlated messages close to the information theoretical limits in the context of multi-way relay (MWR) channels. Specifically, the syndrome approach based on low-density parity-check (LDPC) codes is implemented. A number of relaying strategies are considered for this problem offering a tradeoff between performance and complexity. The proposed solutions have shown significant improvements compared to the existing ones in terms of the achievable compression rates. On a different front, a novel approach to channel coding is proposed for the MWR channel based on the implementation of nested codes in a distributed manner. This approach ensures that each node decodes the messages of the other users without requiring complex operations at the relay, and at the same time, providing substantial benefits compared to the traditional routing solution.
ContributorsSalīm, Aḥmad (Author) / Duman, Tolga M. (Thesis advisor) / Papandreou-Suppappola, Antonia (Committee member) / Tepedelenlioğlu, Cihan (Committee member) / Zhang, Junshan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015