Seminar: ECE Faculty Candidate

 

Monday
February 26
11:00 - 11:50am
Kelley 1007

 

Osvaldo Simeone 
Adjunct Professor/ Post-Doc
New Jersey Institute of Technology

 

Beyond centralized licensed wireless networks: distributed
synchronization and cognitive radio

 

In recent years, the interest of both academia and industry in the field
of wireless communications has shifted from the conventional paradigm of
centralized (cellular) licensed networks to decentralized wireless
structures, such as ad hoc and sensor networks, and to unlicensed
spectrum access, usually referred to as cognitive radio. In this talk,
two key issues in these emerging areas are addressed: distributed
synchronization (self-organization) of decentralized wireless networks
and quality-of-service (stability) guarantee in cognitive radio. In the
first part of the talk, the problem of distributed time synchronization
in decentralized networks is tackled. A large number of applications in
such networks is enabled by, or benefit from, the availability of a
common time-scale among the participating nodes, e.g., tracking of
moving objects via sensor networks and coordinated medium access
control. Achieving and maintaining synchronization in decentralized
scenarios poses new challenges in terms of scalability and energy
efficiency, and offers new opportunities through the interplay with
specific distributed estimation/ detection applications. In this
context, an interesting solution is investigated that is based on the
exchange of local time information among neighboring nodes at the
physical layer (i.e., via transmission of a train of common waveforms
that follows the local clock). Available analytical results are
reported, along with numerical examples that corroborate the main
conclusions and lend evidence to some interesting phenomena, such as
"small-world" effects of shadowing on distributed synchronization. In
the second part of the talk, unlicensed spectrum access (cognitive
radio) is studied by focusing on a simple model with two single-user
links, one licensed to use the spectral resource (primary) and one
unlicensed (secondary or cognitive). According to the cognitive radio
principle, the activity of the secondary link is required not to
interfere with the performance of the primary within the limits imposed
by a given quality-of-service guarantee. The presented analysis aims at
studying the impact on the system performance of: i) traffic dynamics;
ii) sensing errors due to fading at the secondary link; iii) power
allocation at the secondary transmitter based on long-term measurements;
iv) cooperation (relaying) between secondary and primary transmitters.
Throughout the talk, open problems are emphasized along with
opportunities for research.

 

Biography:

 

Osvaldo Simeone is currently an adjunct professor and Post-Doc
researcher at the New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT), Newark, NJ.
He received the M.Sc. degree (with honours) and the Ph.D. degree in
Information Engineering from Politecnico di Milano, Milan, Italy in 2001
and 2005 respectively. His current research interests lie in the field
of information theory and signal processing aspects of wireless systems
with emphasis on cooperative communications, ad hoc wireless networks,
MIMO systems, cognitive radio and distributed synchronization.

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