Proceedings Article10.1117/12.805907
Wireless Visual Sensor Network Resource Allocation using Cross-Layer Optimization
Elizabeth S. Bentley,John D. Matyjas,Michael J. Medley,Lisimachos P. Kondi +3 more
- 18 Jan 2009
- Vol. 7257, pp 134-143
TL;DR: This paper proposes an approach to manage network resources for a Direct Sequence Code Division Multiple Access (DS-CDMA) visual sensor network where nodes monitor scenes with varying levels of motion that uses cross-layer optimization across the physical layer, the link layer and the application layer.
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Abstract: In this paper, we propose an approach to manage network resources for a Direct Sequence Code Division Multiple Access (DS-CDMA) visual sensor network where nodes monitor scenes with varying levels of motion. It uses cross-layer optimization across the physical layer, the link layer and the application layer. Our technique simultaneously assigns a source coding rate, a channel coding rate, and a power level to all nodes in the network based on one of two criteria that maximize the quality of video of the entire network as a whole, subject to a constraint on the total chip rate. One criterion results in the minimal average end-to-end distortion amongst all nodes, while the other criterion minimizes the maximum distortion of the network. Our approach allows one to determine the capacity of the visual sensor network based on the number of nodes and the quality of video that must be transmitted. For bandwidth-limited applications, one can also determine the minimum bandwidth needed to accommodate a number of nodes with a specific target chip rate. Video captured by a sensor node camera is encoded and decoded using the H.264 video codec by a centralized control unit at the network layer. To reduce the computational complexity of the solution, Universal Rate-Distortion Characteristics (URDCs) are obtained experimentally to relate bit error probabilities to the distortion of corrupted video. Bit error rates are found first by using Viterbi’s upper bounds on the bit error probability and second, by simulating nodes transmitting data spread by Total Square Correlation (TSC) codes over a Rayleigh-faded DS-CDMA channel and receiving that data using Auxiliary Vector (AV) filtering.
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Citations
•Proceedings Article
On the capacity of a cellular CDMA system
Klein S. Gilhousen,Irwin M. Jacobs,Roberto Padovani,Andrew J. Viterbi,L.A. Weaver,Charles E. Iii Del Mar Wheatley +5 more
- 01 Jan 1991
TL;DR: It is concluded that properly augmented and power-controlled multiple-cell CDMA (code division multiple access) promises a quantum increase in current cellular capacity.
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Cross-layer design and optimization techniques in wireless multimedia sensor networks for smart cities
TL;DR: Different types of cross-layer design techniques in wireless multimedia sensor networks are presented, giving the reader an insight on prominent challenges and issues along with future directions.
Spread Spectrum Visual Sensor Network Resource Management Using an End-to-End Cross-Layer Design
TL;DR: This paper proposes an approach to manage network resources for a direct sequence code division multiple access (DS-CDMA) visual sensor network where nodes monitor scenes with varying levels of motion that uses cross-layer optimization across the physical layer, the link layer, and the application layer.
GAME-theory-based cross-layer optimization for wireless DS-CDMA visual sensor networks
Lisimachos P. Kondi,Elizabeth S. Bentley +1 more
- 03 Dec 2010
TL;DR: A game-theory-based cross-layer optimization scheme for wireless Direct Sequence Code Division Multiple Access (DS-CDMA) visual sensor networks using the Nash Bargaining Solution, which assumes that the nodes negotiate, with the help of a centralized control unit, on how to allocate resources.
15
Optimal power allocation and joint source-channel coding for wireless DS-CDMA visual sensor networks using the Nash Bargaining Solution
Katerina Pandremmenou,Lisimachos P. Kondi,Konstantinos E. Parsopoulos +2 more
- 22 May 2011
TL;DR: The Nash Bargaining Solution from game theory is used in order to determine the transmission power and source and channel coding rate for each node in a Direct Sequence Code Division Multiple Access wireless visual sensor network.
References
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On the capacity of a cellular CDMA system
Klein S. Gilhousen,Irwin M. Jacobs,Roberto Padovani,Andrew J. Viterbi,L.A. Weaver,Charles E. Iii Del Mar Wheatley +5 more
- 01 Jan 1991
TL;DR: It is concluded that properly augmented and power-controlled multiple-cell CDMA (code division multiple access) promises a quantum increase in current cellular capacity.
2.9K
Rate-compatible punctured convolutional codes (RCPC codes) and their applications
TL;DR: In this article, the concept of punctured convolutional codes is extended by punctuating a low-rate 1/N code periodically with period P to obtain a family of codes with rate P/(P+l), where l can be varied between 1 and (N-1)P. This allows transmission of incremental redundancy in ARQ/FEC (automatic repeat request/forward error correction) schemes and continuous rate variation to change from low to high error protection within a data frame.
2K
A multistage representation of the Wiener filter based on orthogonal projections
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the cross-spectral metric is optimal in the sense that it maximizes mutual information between the observed and desired processes and is capable of outperforming the more complex eigendecomposition-based methods.
New bounds on the total squared correlation and optimum design of DS-CDMA binary signature sets
TL;DR: New bounds on the TSC of binary signature sets are derived for any number of signatures K and any signature length L and for almost all K, L in {1,2,...,256}, and the design procedure is based on simple transformations of Hadamard matrices.
182
Joint source-channel coding for motion-compensated DCT-based SNR scalable video
TL;DR: An approach toward joint source-channel coding for motion-compensated DCT-based scalable video coding and transmission and a framework for the optimal selection of the source and channel coding rates over all scalable layers is presented such that the overall distortion is minimized.