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Showing 1 - 5 of 5 matches in All Departments
This book gives comprehensive and balanced coverage of the principles of cognitive radio communications, cognitive networks, and details of their implementation, including the latest developments in the standards and spectrum policy. Case studies, end-of-chapter questions, and descriptions of various platforms and test beds, together with sample code, give hands-on knowledge of how cognitive radio systems can be implemented in practice. Extensive treatment is given to several standards, including IEEE 802.22 for TV White Spaces and IEEE SCC41. Written by leading people in the field, both at universities and major industrial research laboratories, this tutorial text gives communications engineers, R&D engineers, researchers, undergraduate and post graduate students a complete reference on the application of wireless communications and network theory for the design and implementation of cognitive radio systems and networks. Each chapter is written by internationally renowned experts, giving complete and balanced treatment of the fundamentals of both cognitive radio communications and cognitive networks, together with implementation detailsExtensive treatment of the latest standards and spectrum policy developments enables the development of compliant cognitive systemsStrong practical orientation - through case studies and descriptions of cognitive radio platforms and testbeds - shows how "real world" cognitive radio systems and network architectures have been builtAdditional materials, slides, solutions to end-of-chapter problems, and sample codes, are available at www.elsevierdirect.com/companions Alexander M. Wyglinski is an Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI), Director of the WPI Limerick Project Center, and Director of the Wireless Innovation Laboratory (WI Lab). Maziar Nekovee leads cognitive radio research at BT (British Telecom) and is also involved in leading a number of large EU and International collaborative R&D projects on cognitive radio networks and secondary/dynamic spectrum access. Y. Thomas Hou is an Associate Professor of Electrical and
Computer Engineering at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University ("Virginia Tech"), Blacksburg, VA, USA.
Written in a unique style, this book is a valuable resource for faculty, graduate students, and researchers in the communications and networking area whose work interfaces with optimization. It teaches you how various optimization methods can be applied to solve complex problems in wireless networks. Each chapter reviews a specific optimization method and then demonstrates how to apply the theory in practice through a detailed case study taken from state-of-the-art research. You will learn various tips and step-by-step instructions for developing optimization models, reformulations, and transformations, particularly in the context of cross-layer optimization problems in wireless networks involving flow routing (network layer), scheduling (link layer), and power control (physical layer). Throughout, a combination of techniques from both operations research and computer science disciplines provides a holistic treatment of optimization methods and their applications. Each chapter includes homework exercises, with PowerPoint slides and a solutions manual for instructors available online.
The "dean of Boston historians" (New York Times Book Review) brings to life the colorful story of Boston's Irish: Honey Fitz, the Kennedys, James Michael Curley, and other political heroes and scoundrels. According to the distinguished historian Thomas H. O'Connor, Irish political dominance in Boston grew out of generations of bitter conflict between Yankees and Irish Catholic immigrants. O'Connor charts the course of the Irish's growing political influence in Boston against the background of this clash between two different cultures. Beginning with the Irish-born organizers of the 1870s and 1880s, O'Connor profiles Boston's charismatic leaders, from Boston-born populists like James Michael Curley at the turn of the century to Irish Catholic mayors in the 1950s and 1960s who created the "new Boston" to the resurgent neighborhood populists of the 1970s and 1980s. This compelling work offers important insights into the unique experience of the Irish community in Boston, and it provides a lively portrait of the men and women who made their way through the long and tortuous maze of Boston politics.
To celebrate the archdiocese of Boston's bicentennial, this informative volume chronicles a wide range of Boston history with a particular concentration on religion. Each chapter examines a different angle of the Church's past by focusing on influential figures, including Bishop Cheverus, John F. Kennedy, and Elizabeth Seton. Contributors--such as Libby MacDonald Bischof, Francois Gauthier, Carol Hurd Green, and Rev. Joseph M. O'Keefe, SJ--also provide keen insights into the future of the city and its faith in this valuable reference.
Between 1950 and 1970, an unusual alliance of government and business interacting with neighborhood groups created impressive physical revitalization in Boston. A city characterized at the end of World War II by a rich history, an undistinguished skyline, urban decay, and no discernible plan for its future, Boston by the end of the 1970s featured a striking silhouette of old and new buildings symbolizing changes that transformed the city into one of America's five most vital and attractive urban centers. But the rejuvenation also produced unintended, frequently contradictory, and sometimes tragic consequences. The multicultural West End was destroyed and many of its residents were displaced. The attraction of new capital, new business, and tourists to the revitalized city wrought damaging social and economic vibrations that continue to this day. This book provides the first comprehensive political history of Boston's renewal and its aftermath. It is a tale principally of the determination of two mayors, John B. Hynes and John F. Collins, and those inside government and the business community who worked with them. It is also the story of community resistance, particularly in the immigrant West End and the predominantly black South End, by those who perceived the original plans as harmful to their communities.
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