Upcoming Webinar: 15 March 2021 by Dr. Zhiguo Ding
With the current rollout of 5G, the focus of the research community is shifting towards the design of the next generation of mobile systems, e.g., 6G mobile networks. Non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) has been recognized as an essential enabling technology for the forthcoming 6G networks to meet the heterogeneous demands on low latency, high reliability, massive connectivity...
Upcoming Webinar: 20 January 2021 by Dr. Charilaos I. Kanatsoulis and Dr. Nikolaos D. Sidiropoulos
Signal sampling and reconstruction is a fundamental engineering task at the heart of signal processing. The celebrated Shannon-Nyquist theorem guarantees perfect signal reconstruction from uniform samples, obtained at a rate twice the maximum frequency present in the signal.
Upcoming Webinar by Dr. Foad Sohabi: "Hybrid Digital and Analog Beamforming Design for Large-Scale Antenna Arrays"
The potentials of using millimeter-wave (mmWave) frequency for future wireless cellular communication systems have motivated the study of large-scale antenna arrays for achieving highly directional beamforming. However, the conventional fully digital beamforming methods, which require one radio frequency (RF) chain per antenna element, are not viable for large-scale antenna arrays due to the high cost and high power consumption of RF chain components in high frequencies.
Upcoming Webinar by Dr. Foad Sohabi: "Hybrid Digital and Analog Beamforming Design for Large-Scale Antenna Arrays"
The potentials of using millimeter-wave (mmWave) frequency for future wireless cellular communication systems have motivated the study of large-scale antenna arrays for achieving highly directional beamforming. However, the conventional fully digital beamforming methods, which require one radio frequency (RF) chain per antenna element, are not viable for large-scale antenna arrays due to the high cost and high power consumption of RF chain components in high frequencies.
Upcoming Webinar by Dr. Stefania Sardellitti: "Joint Optimization of Radio and Computational Resources in Mobile Edge Computing"
In recent years, we have seen the emergence of new compute-intensive and delay-critical mobile applications, such as virtual/augmented reality, online gaming, ultra-high-definition video streaming and autonomous driving. Multi-access edge computing (MEC) has become a key technology in 5G networks to shift computational tasks from resource-limited mobile devices to nearby servers placed at the edge of the network.
Upcoming Webinar: "How the Mobile Phone Became a Camera"
The first camera phone was sold in 2000, when taking pictures with your phone was an oddity, and sharing pictures online was unheard-of. Today, barely twenty years later, the smartphone is more camera than phone. This transformation was enabled by advances in computational photography — the science and engineering of making great images from small form factor, mobile cameras.
Upcoming Webinar: "An Algorithmic Investigation of Hybrid Beamforming for 5G and Beyond Networks"
Large-scale antenna arrays, also known as massive MIMO, are key enablers for 5G and beyond networks, which, however, bring tremendous pressures on hardware cost and energy consumption.
Upcoming Webinar: "20 Years of Musical Genre Classification of Audio Signals"
In 2000, compact discs were the dominant mode of music distribution and the use of digital compressed audio files for playback using computers was just beginning. Most of the research on analyzing music was done with symbolic representations rather than audio signals. The presenter, Dr. George Tzanetakis, is fascinated by pattern recognition, computer vision, and speech recognition.
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