Modelling of wideband inter-element EM coupling in 2D space-time frequency domain

Author(s):  
Leonid Belostotski ◽  
Arjuna Madanayake ◽  
Michael A. Petursson ◽  
Len T. Bruton
2012 ◽  
Vol 429 ◽  
pp. 179-185
Author(s):  
Hui Liu ◽  
Jing Shan Jiao ◽  
Fu Chun Zhang ◽  
Ling Zhou

The pilots that are transmitted by different transmitting antennas must be orthogonal after being shifted. So the time domain channel estimating solution is deduced through LS based on the MIMO-OFDM channel estimating model. The time domain solution need the inverse operation of matrix, and its operating quantity is large. So the three dimensions pilot based on space domain, time domain and frequency domain is designed. The method need not the inverse operation of matrix for the time domain channel estimating solution and can reduce the complexity of channel estimating and make the channel estimating error minimum. It is shown from the simulation that the channel estimating method of this paper based on space domain, time space and frequency domain pilot has better MSE and BER performances compared with the traditional LS algorithm and the document algorithm.


2015 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 25
Author(s):  
Nur Farahiah Ibrahim ◽  
Zahari Abu Bakar ◽  
Azlina Idris

Channel estimation techniques for Multiple-input Multiple-output Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (MIMO-OFDM) based on comb type pilot arrangement with least-square error (LSE) estimator was investigated with space-time-frequency (STF) diversity implementation. The frequency offset in OFDM effected its performance. This was mitigated with the implementation of the presented inter-carrier interference self-cancellation (ICI-SC) techniques and different space-time subcarrier mapping. STF block coding in the system exploits the spatial, temporal and frequency diversity to improve performance. Estimated channel was fed into a decoder which combined the STF decoding together with the estimated channel coefficients using LSE estimator for equalization. The performance of the system was compared by measuring the symbol error rate with a PSK-16 and PSK-32. The results show that subcarrier mapping together with ICI-SC were able to increase the system performance. Introduction of channel estimation was also able to estimate the channel coefficient at only 5dB difference with a perfectly known channel.


Author(s):  
Wentao Xie ◽  
Qian Zhang ◽  
Jin Zhang

Smart eyewear (e.g., AR glasses) is considered to be the next big breakthrough for wearable devices. The interaction of state-of-the-art smart eyewear mostly relies on the touchpad which is obtrusive and not user-friendly. In this work, we propose a novel acoustic-based upper facial action (UFA) recognition system that serves as a hands-free interaction mechanism for smart eyewear. The proposed system is a glass-mounted acoustic sensing system with several pairs of commercial speakers and microphones to sense UFAs. There are two main challenges in designing the system. The first challenge is that the system is in a severe multipath environment and the received signal could have large attenuation due to the frequency-selective fading which will degrade the system's performance. To overcome this challenge, we design an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM)-based channel state information (CSI) estimation scheme that is able to measure the phase changes caused by a facial action while mitigating the frequency-selective fading. The second challenge is that because the skin deformation caused by a facial action is tiny, the received signal has very small variations. Thus, it is hard to derive useful information directly from the received signal. To resolve this challenge, we apply a time-frequency analysis to derive the time-frequency domain signal from the CSI. We show that the derived time-frequency domain signal contains distinct patterns for different UFAs. Furthermore, we design a Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) to extract high-level features from the time-frequency patterns and classify the features into six UFAs, namely, cheek-raiser, brow-raiser, brow-lower, wink, blink and neutral. We evaluate the performance of our system through experiments on data collected from 26 subjects. The experimental result shows that our system can recognize the six UFAs with an average F1-score of 0.92.


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