Academic literature on the topic 'Applied mathematics|Electrical engineering|Technical communication'

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Journal articles on the topic "Applied mathematics|Electrical engineering|Technical communication"

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Malvar, H. S. "Effective communication: Tips on technical writing [DSP Education]." IEEE Signal Processing Magazine 25, no. 3 (2008): 129–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/msp.2008.918683.

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Padgett, W. T., and M. A. Yoder. "Effective Communication: Excellence in a Technical Presentation [DSP Education]." IEEE Signal Processing Magazine 25, no. 2 (2008): 124–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/msp.2007.914726.

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Keating, Terrence, and Mike Long. "Collaborating For Success: Team Teaching The Engineering Technical Thesis." American Journal of Engineering Education (AJEE) 3, no. 1 (2012): 19–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.19030/ajee.v3i1.6886.

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This paper will examine the collaborative teaching process undertaken at College of the North Atlantic- Qatar (CNA-Q) by Engineering and the Communication faculties to improve the overall quality of engineering students’ capstone projects known as the Technical Thesis. The Technical Thesis is divided into two separate components: a proposal stage (Tech Thesis 1- investigative) and a technical/presentation stage (Tech Thesis 2 - final written and oral communicative report). It involves a complex blending of experimentation, technical information and data with competent formal technical report writing skills. In an EFL (English as a Foreign Language) environment, this challenge is formidable for students as it involves high technical as well as linguistic competencies. In an effort to gain accreditation from the Canadian Technology Accreditation Board (CTAB), a standing committee of The Canadian Council of Technicians and Technologists (CCTT) which provides national accreditation for over 240 post-secondary engineering technology and applied technology programs in Canada, the School of Engineering realized student results on the Technical Thesis at CNA-Q needed marked improvement. A pilot project, started during the 2008- 2009 academic year, brought engineering faculty from various fields (Chemical Processing, Electrical, Mechanical, Process Automation and Telecommunications) together with writing faculty from the Communications Department to take on the task of improving final Tech Thesis results through co-delivery. Specifically, this paper will examine: the process of developing the collaborative teaching approach at CNA-Q; its perceived value by the stakeholders (faculty and students); the ongoing challenges associated with its delivery; and the overall level of improvement in student performance on the Technical Thesis as a result of the collaboration.
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Padovani, Stephania. "Patricia Wright [Universidade de Cardiff – País de Gales /Reino Unido]." InfoDesign - Revista Brasileira de Design da Informação 2, no. 1 (2010): 47–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.51358/id.v2i1.19.

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Cientista do comportamento com PhD em Psicologia pela University College London [1966], com interesse na contribuio do design da informao na comunicao com o pblico em geral, quer em organizaes pblicas ou comerciais. At 1968 trabalhou na Medical Research Council's Applied Psychology Unit em Cambridge, quando passou a ser coordenadora da School of Psychology na Universidade de Cardiff, onde a maior parte de suas pesquisas est voltada para informao na rea de sade e para documentos multimdia. Possui diversas publicaes, sendo membro de vrias revistas cientficas e de sociedades como: The British Psychological Society, The Institute of Scientific and Technical Communicators (GB) e membro honorrio da Society for Technical Communication (EUA) e da Sociedade Brasileira de Design da Informao. Em 2005 recebeu o prmio Goldsmith Award for Distinguished Contributions to Engineering Communication pelo Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). [ Download ]
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Lamas, Amilton Costa, and Anderson Gomes Domingues. "Social Electrical Engineering: A Pathway for Better Undergraduate Education." International Journal on Alive Engineering Education 5, no. 1 (2018): 13. http://dx.doi.org/10.5216/ijaeedu.v5i1.48146.

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As engineering skills becomes a commodity, electrical engineers’ programs are urged to adapt their pedagogical strategies do better prepared their graduates. The 21st century engineers are expected to have a strong technical background while being capable to work with people with different kinds of intellectual and social capitals, and to have a high level of cognitive flexibility. This article reports on the application of an information appropriation method, adopted by the Department of Electrical Engineering at PUC-Campinas, where activities on extension projects are simultaneously conducted along with the regularly schedule classes. The study case is related to the coplanning and cocreation of a technological white cane (proof of connect) between electrical engineering students, social technicians and the visually impaired. In the present case, the technicians were led to reinterpret, adapt and reinvent technology while contributing to the design and build of a low cost adaptive electronic sensing aid attachable to a white cane. The collaborative method, applied during conversation rounds, is based on a virtuous cyclic process which includes steps like information capture, validation, guidance and feedback. The engineering students, on the other hand, have the opportunity to develop their communication, analysis and interpretation skills in a way not available in the classroom. They also experience solving conflict situations and find creative uses and applications for they knowledge not otherwise foreseen. The participating students transformed information into knowledge through a dialogical experience with people having a contrasting technological background to its own. Through this experience the engineering graduates emerged with a greater sense of responsibility with the society and a better understanding of what means to be an engineer. Participation in the Extension Project also brought up several opportunities of professional recognition by the technicians and the visual impaired themselves, which stimulated the students do achieve better performance in the course.
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Pokorný, Jan, Jiří Pokorný, and Jan Vrba. "Electromagnetic communication between cells through tunneling nanotubes." International Journal of Microwave and Wireless Technologies 12, no. 9 (2020): 831–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s175907872000046x.

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AbstractStructures of tunneling nanotubes (TNTs) of the circular cross-section of 50 and 200 nm and length up to 1 mm form a communication system between cells. While transport of material such as endocytic vesicles, mitochondria, proteins, cytoplasmic molecules, etc., is experimentally proven, a possible transfer of electric and electromagnetic energy across TNTs corresponding to electrotechnical processes of excitation, propagation, and amplification in cavity systems is yet in a beginning stage of research. The ideas presented in this paper are based on technical mechanisms applied to submicroscopic systems. Main features of corrugated periodic structures, electromagnetic circular waveguides, the Manley–Rowe amplification, the Fröhlich non-linear interaction of coherent electric polar vibrations, and description of cut-off frequency propagating limits in the waveguide and cavities and along periodic structures are discussed. We suggest that cell-to-cell connection with TNTs may form a unified coherent cavity system which enables simultaneity and mutual cooperation in multicellular organisms.
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Do, Minh, Quang Nguyen, Ha Nguyen, Daniel Kubacki, and Sanjay Patel. "Immersive Visual Communication." IEEE Signal Processing Magazine 28, no. 1 (2011): 58–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/msp.2010.939075.

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PRIBRAM, KARL H. "SOME NEW HORIZONS IN RECORDING THE EEG." New Mathematics and Natural Computation 05, no. 01 (2009): 7–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s1793005709001167.

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The advent of multiple electrode recording, dense arrays and mathematical techniques such as non-linear dynamics has invigorated brain electrical recording techniques. Taking advantage of the excellent temporal resolution of the EEG, this summary review details several innovations, concentrating on (1) the rapid changes in electrical activity and a consequent stable complex pattern; and (2) the utilization of engineering techniques that have been applied across scales ranging upward from quantum physics. The implications for brain localization and for communication science are developed.
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Hou, Zhanwei, Changyang She, Yonghui Li, Li Zhuo, and Branka Vucetic. "Prediction and Communication Co-Design for Ultra-Reliable and Low-Latency Communications." IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications 19, no. 2 (2020): 1196–209. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/twc.2019.2951660.

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Vasilieva, O. N., and N. V. Konovalova. "Engineering Classes as a Tool of Professional Navigation." Higher Education in Russia 27, no. 12 (2019): 136–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.31992/0869-3617-2018-27-12-136-143.

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The article emphasizes the importance and relevance of engineering education in the face of challenges of the modern information society, development of new technologies and knowledgeintensive industries. Attention is paid to the low level of demand for engineering professions among potential entrants, as well as to the issue of developing competencies needed for a modern engineer, taking into account the requirements of the labour market. The article describes the experience of I.N. Ulianov Chuvash State University on organizing career-guidance work with pupils of educational in-stitutions, including implementation of projects aimed at popularization of engineering education. One of such significant for the region projects is “Engineering classes”, in which senior classes schoolchildren of four leading partner-schools of the University take part. The training program includes lessons on mathematics, physics and computer sciences, reinforcing training of future entrants for getting higher engineering-technical education, as well as an elective part on solving applied engineering tasks from the following sections: electronics, robotics, mechatronics, 3D modeling, engineering graphics, and prototyping. A specific feature of the project is a broad engagement of students majoring in technical directions as tutors into the educational process when schoolchildren perform research and design work. Along with higher levels of knowledge in basic subjects for a future engineer, an active participation of schoolchildren in project activities makes it possible to develop communication skills, acquire experience of team work, which is particularly in demand by employers. The article stresses the important role of the largest industrial regional enterprises in implementing the project. These enterprises provide their production sites to explore the organization of production and professional activities of engineers, as well as participate in holding Olympiads and creative contests and provide opportunities for subsequent target training. Thus, the project «Engineering classes» makes it possible to implement the model of continuing education in a single chain «School-University-Enterprise», thereby creating preconditions for the growth of human capacity in regional high-tech enterprises.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Applied mathematics|Electrical engineering|Technical communication"

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Kaur, Amandeep. "Comparison of Different Predistortion Techniques for Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing Systems." Thesis, California State University, Long Beach, 2019. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=13426595.

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<p> Wireless channels have significant problems like multipath fading, delay spread, frequency selective fading. Guard bands/channel equalization techniques are employed to overcome these. However, these solutions are complex and don&rsquo;t solve the issue of bandwidth scarcity. Thus, Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing was introduced; a special case of Frequency Division Multiplexing where orthogonal subcarriers overlap in the frequency domain using lesser bandwidth without any inter-symbol interference. </p><p> The next challenge is to reduce the error rate in transmission. This thesis focuses on the noise created because of the non-linear input/output relationship of the power amplifier used. Different techniques used to linearize power amplifiers are compared. Predistortion was found to be most effective. Various predistortion schemes are compared and error rate performance evaluated for the Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing system with and without Predistortion as well as for different modulation techniques. Dynamic Digital Predistortion paired with 8 Quadrature Amplitude Modulation was found to work most efficiently.</p><p>
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McKell, Kenneth. "Game Theoretic Approaches to Communication over MIMO Interference Channels in the Presence of a Malicious Jammer." Thesis, University of Hawai'i at Manoa, 2019. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=13421935.

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<p> This dissertation considers a system consisting of self-interested users of a common multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) channel and a jammer wishing to reduce the total capacity of the channel. In this setting, two games are constructed that model different system-level objectives. In the first&mdash;called &ldquo;utility games&rdquo;&mdash;the users maximize the mutual information between their transmitter and their receiver subject to a power constraint. In the other (termed &ldquo;cost games&rdquo;), the users minimize power subject to an information rate floor. A duality is established between the equilibrium strategies in these two games, and it is shown that Nash equilibria always exist in utility games. Via an exact penalty approach, a modified version of the cost game also possesses an equilibrium. Additionally, multiple equilibria may exist in utility games, but with mild assumptions on users&rsquo; own channels and the jammer-user channels, systems with no user-user interference, there can be at most one Nash equilibrium where a user transmits on all of its subchannels. A similar but weaker result is also found for channels with limited amounts of user-user interference. Two distributed update processes are proposed: gradient-play and best-response. The performance of these algorithms are compared via software simulation. Finally, previous results on network-level improvement via stream control are shown to carry over when a jammer is introduced. </p><p>
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Agarwal, Akash. "A Study of Communication Link Removal in Static and Dynamic Teams." The Ohio State University, 2017. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1510680159436136.

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Higgins, Matthew D. "Genetic algorithm optimisation methods applied to the indoor optical wireless communications channel." Thesis, University of Warwick, 2009. http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/2757/.

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This thesis details an investigation into the application of genetic algorithms to indoor optical wireless communication systems. The principle aims are to show how it is possible for a genetic algorithm to control the received power distribution within multiple dynamic environments, such that a single receiver design can be employed lowering system costs. This kind of approach is not typical within the research currently being undertaken, where normally, the emphasis on system performance has always been linked with improvements to the receiver design. Within this thesis, a custom built simulator has been developed with the ability to determine the channel characteristics at all locations with the system deployment environment, for multiple configurations including user movement and user alignment variability. Based on these results an investigation began into the structure of the genetic algorithm, testing 192 different ones in total. After evaluation of each one of the algorithms and their performance merits, 2 genetic algorithms remained and are proposed for use. These 2 algorithms were shown capable of reducing the receiver power deviation by up to 26%, and forming, whilst the user perturbs the channel, through movement and variable alignment, a consistent power distribution to within 12% of the optimised case. The final part of the work, extends the use of the genetic algorithm to not only try to optimise the received power deviation, but also the received signal to noise ratio deviation. It was shown that the genetic algorithm is capable of reducing the deviation by around 12% in an empty environment and maintain this optimised case to within 10% when the user perturbs the channel.
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Blair, Ballard J. S. (Ballard Justin Smith). "Analysis of and techniques for adaptive equalization for underwater acoustic communication." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/68436.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--Joint Program in Oceanography/Applied Ocean Science and Engineering (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science; and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution), 2011.<br>Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.<br>Includes bibliographical references (p. 203-215).<br>Underwater wireless communication is quickly becoming a necessity for applications in ocean science, defense, and homeland security. Acoustics remains the only practical means of accomplishing long-range communication in the ocean. The acoustic communication channel is fraught with difficulties including limited available bandwidth, long delay-spread, time-variability, and Doppler spreading. These difficulties reduce the reliability of the communication system and make high data-rate communication challenging. Adaptive decision feedback equalization is a common method to compensate for distortions introduced by the underwater acoustic channel. Limited work has been done thus far to introduce the physics of the underwater channel into improving and better understanding the operation of a decision feedback equalizer. This thesis examines how to use physical models to improve the reliability and reduce the computational complexity of the decision feedback equalizer. The specific topics covered by this work are: how to handle channel estimation errors for the time varying channel, how to use angular constraints imposed by the environment into an array receiver, what happens when there is a mismatch between the true channel order and the estimated channel order, and why there is a performance difference between the direct adaptation and channel estimation based methods for computing the equalizer coefficients. For each of these topics, algorithms are provided that help create a more robust equalizer with lower computational complexity for the underwater channel.<br>by Ballard J. S. Blair.<br>Ph.D.
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Yellepeddi, Atulya. "Direct-form adaptive equalization for underwater acoustic communication." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/1912/5281.

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Thesis (S.M.)--Joint Program in Applied Ocean Science and Engineering (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science; and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution), 2012.<br>Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.<br>Includes bibliographical references (p. 139-143).<br>Adaptive equalization is an important aspect of communication systems in various environments. It is particularly important in underwater acoustic communication systems, as the channel has a long delay spread and is subject to the effects of time- varying multipath fading and Doppler spreading. The design of the adaptation algorithm has a profound influence on the performance of the system. In this thesis, we explore this aspect of the system. The emphasis of the work presented is on applying concepts from inference and decision theory and information theory to provide an approach to deriving and analyzing adaptation algorithms. Limited work has been done so far on rigorously devising adaptation algorithms to suit a particular situation, and the aim of this thesis is to concretize such efforts and possibly to provide a mathematical basis for expanding it to other applications. We derive an algorithm for the adaptation of the coefficients of an equalizer when the receiver has limited or no information about the transmitted symbols, which we term the Soft-Decision Directed Recursive Least Squares algorithm. We will demonstrate connections between the Expectation-Maximization (EM) algorithm and the Recursive Least Squares algorithm, and show how to derive a computationally efficient, purely recursive algorithm from the optimal EM algorithm. Then, we use our understanding of Markov processes to analyze the performance of the RLS algorithm in hard-decision directed mode, as well as of the Soft-Decision Directed RLS algorithm. We demonstrate scenarios in which the adaptation procedures fail catastrophically, and discuss why this happens. The lessons from the analysis guide us on the choice of models for the adaptation procedure. We then demonstrate how to use the algorithm derived in a practical system for underwater communication using turbo equalization. As the algorithm naturally incorporates soft information into the adaptation process, it becomes easy to fit it into a turbo equalization framework. We thus provide an instance of how to use the information of a turbo equalizer in an adaptation procedure, which has not been very well explored in the past. Experimental data is used to prove the value of the algorithm in a practical context.<br>by Atulya Yellepeddi.<br>S.M.
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Murphy, Christopher Alden. "Progressively communicating rich telemetry from autonomous underwater vehicles via relays." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/75643.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--Joint Program in Applied Ocean Science and Engineering (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science; and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution), 2012.<br>Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.<br>Includes bibliographical references (p. 118-131).<br>As analysis of imagery and environmental data plays a greater role in mission construction and execution, there is an increasing need for autonomous marine vehicles to transmit this data to the surface. Without access to the data acquired by a vehicle, surface operators cannot fully understand the state of the mission. Communicating imagery and high-resolution sensor readings to surface observers remains a significant challenge - as a result, current telemetry from free-roaming autonomous marine vehicles remains limited to 'heartbeat' status messages, with minimal scientific data available until after recovery. Increasing the challenge, long-distance communication may require relaying data across multiple acoustic hops between vehicles, yet fixed infrastructure is not always appropriate or possible. In this thesis I present an analysis of the unique considerations facing telemetry systems for free-roaming Autonomous Underwater Vehicles (AUVs) used in exploration. These considerations include high-cost vehicle nodes with persistent storage and significant computation capabilities, combined with human surface operators monitoring each node. I then propose mechanisms for interactive, progressive communication of data across multiple acoustic hops. These mechanisms include wavelet-based embedded coding methods, and a novel image compression scheme based on texture classification and synthesis. The specific characteristics of underwater communication channels, including high latency, intermittent communication, the lack of instantaneous end-to-end connectivity, and a broadcast medium, inform these proposals. Human feedback is incorporated by allowing operators to identify segments of data that warrant higher quality refinement, ensuring efficient use of limited throughput. I then analyze the performance of these mechanisms relative to current practices. Finally, I present CAPTURE, a telemetry architecture that builds on this analysis. CAPTURE draws on advances in compression and delay tolerant networking to enable progressive transmission of scientific data, including imagery, across multiple acoustic hops. In concert with a physical layer, CAPTURE provides an end-to- end networking solution for communicating science data from autonomous marine vehicles. Automatically selected imagery, sonar, and time-series sensor data are progressively transmitted across multiple hops to surface operators. Human operators can request arbitrarily high-quality refinement of any resource, up to an error-free reconstruction. The components of this system are then demonstrated through three field trials in diverse environments on SeaBED, OceanServer and Bluefin AUVs, each in different software architectures.<br>by Christopher Alden Murphy.<br>Ph.D.
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Papp, Joseph C. "Physically constrained maximum likelihood (PCML) mode filtering and its application as a pre-processing method for underwater acoustic communication." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/54649.

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Thesis (S.M.)--Joint Program in Oceanography/Applied Ocean Science and Engineering (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science; and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution), 2009.<br>Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.<br>Includes bibliographical references (p. 85-87).<br>Mode filtering is most commonly implemented using the sampled mode shape or pseudoinverse algorithms. Buck et al [1] placed these techniques in the context of a broader maximum a posteriori (MAP) framework. However, the MAP algorithm requires that the signal and noise statistics be known a priori. Adaptive array processing algorithms are candidates for improving performance without the need for a priori signal and noise statistics. A variant of the physically constrained, maximum likelihood (PCML) algorithm [2] is developed for mode filtering that achieves the same performance as the MAP mode filter yet does not need a priori knowledge of the signal and noise statistics. The central innovation of this adaptive mode filter is that the received signal's sample covariance matrix, as estimated by the algorithm, is constrained to be that which can be physically realized given a modal propagation model and an appropriate noise model. The first simulation presented in this thesis models the acoustic pressure field as a complex Gaussian random vector and compares the performance of the pseudoinverse, reduced rank pseudoinverse, sampled mode shape, PCML minimum power distortionless response (MPDR), PCML-MAP, and MAP mode filters. The PCML-MAP filter performs as well as the MAP filter without the need for a priori data statistics. The PCML-MPDR filter performs nearly as well as the MAP filter as well, and avoids a sawtooth pattern that occurs with the reduced rank pseudoinverse filter. The second simulation presented models the underwater environment and broadband communication setup of the Shallow Water 2006 (SW06) experiment.<br>(cont.) Data processing results are presented from the Shallow Water 2006 experiment, showing the reduced sensitivity of the PCML-MPDR filter to white noise compared with the reduced rank pseudoinverse filter. Lastly, a linear, decision-directed, RLS equalizer is used to combine the response of several modes and its performance is compared with an equalizer applied directly to the data received on each hydrophone.<br>by Joseph C. Papp.<br>S.M.
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Carper, Scott Adams. "Low frequency active sonar performance in the Arctic Beaufort Lens." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/113758.

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Thesis: S.M. in Oceanographic Engineering, Joint Program in Applied Ocean Science and Engineering (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering; and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution), 2017.<br>Thesis: S.M., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science; and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution), 2017.<br>Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.<br>Includes bibliographical references (pages 885-86).<br>A newly discovered double ducted acoustic environment present throughout much of the Beaufort Sea in the Arctic has a major effect on active acoustic transmissions. This work performs an in depth analysis of how the lower duct impacts the propagation of various active signals used commonly for acoustic communications or active sonar. First, this thesis performs a thorough modal analysis of the effect of the double ducted environment on long range propagation of a 300 Hz and 3500 Hz pulse. Signal excess is determined for the two different source pulses to quantify the effect of the lower duct on noise and SNR. Finally, channel capacity is calculated for the two frequency bands to evaluate operational impacts of the lower duct on acoustic communication systems in the Arctic.<br>by Scott Adams Carper<br>S.M. in Oceanographic Engineering<br>S.M.
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Thally, Ryan. "Automation in Entertainment: Concept, Design, and Application." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2017. https://dc.etsu.edu/honors/401.

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The focus of this thesis is to explore the automation technology used in the modern entertainment industry. Upon completion of my thesis, I will deliver a working prototype of the chosen technology and present its capabilities in a choreographed show.
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Books on the topic "Applied mathematics|Electrical engineering|Technical communication"

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Blaunstein, Nathan. Ionosphere and Applied Aspects of Radio Communication and Radar. Taylor and Francis, 2008.

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Blaunstein, Nathan. Ionosphere and applied aspects of radio communication and radar. CRC Press, 2008.

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Jinsoo, Bae, and Ki Sun Yong 1968-, eds. Advanced theory of signal detection: Weak signal detection in generalized observations. Springer, 2002.

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Bi, Guoan. Transforms and fast algorithms for signal analysis and representations. Birkhauser, 2003.

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Casimer, DeCusatis, and Das Pankaj K. 1937-, eds. Wavelets and subbands: Fundamentals and applications : with 234 figures. Birkhaüser, 2002.

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Anton, Stoorvogel, and Sannuti Peddapullaiah 1941-, eds. Filtering theory: With applications to fault detection, isolation, and estimation. Birkhäuser, 2007.

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Asia-Pacific, Conference on Communications (5th 1999 Beijing China). Proceedings APCC/OECC'99: Fifth Asia-Pacific Conference on Communications and Fourth Optoelectronics and Communications Conference : APCC/OECC'99 ; [joint conference held] October 18-22, 1999, Friendship Hotel, Beijing China. Pub. House, BUPT, 1999.

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International, Topical Meeting on Microwave Photonics (1999 Melbourne Vic ). International Topical Meeting on Microwave Photonics: MWP '99 : November 17-19, 1999, Rydges Carlton Hotel, Melbourne, Australia. IEEE, 1999.

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International, Topical Meeting on Microwave Photonics (1999 Melbourne Vic ). International Topical Meeting on Microwave Photonics: MWP '99 : November 17-19, 1999, Rydges Carlton Hotel, Melbourne, Australia. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, 1999.

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Australian Data Fusion Symposium (2nd 1999 Adelaide, Australia). IDC-99: 1999 Information, Decision and Control : Data and Information Fusion Symposium, Signal Processing and Communications Symposium and Decision and Control Symposium : Adelaide, Australia, 8-10 February, 1999 : proceedings. IEEE, 1999.

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Book chapters on the topic "Applied mathematics|Electrical engineering|Technical communication"

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Haitao, Li, and Chen Xiaomin. "Multi-Agent Technology Applied to Mobile Communication." In Lecture Notes in Electrical Engineering. Springer Netherlands, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-2169-2_187.

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Yang, Shiji, Lixing You, Ming Zhang, and Jianyu Wang. "Research of Single Photon Detectors Applied in Quantum Communication." In Lecture Notes in Electrical Engineering. Springer London, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4471-4793-0_3.

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Sohn, Kyung-Rak, Seung-Ho Yang, and Jae-Hwan Jeong. "Performance of Nano-crystalline Inductive Couplers Applied to Ship Powerline Communication." In Lecture Notes in Electrical Engineering. Springer Singapore, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-0311-1_6.

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Yong, Wei, Xu Wei-guo, Zhang Yong-li, and Chen Zhi-hong. "Application Analysis on EPON Technology Applied in Communication System of Smart Substation." In Lecture Notes in Electrical Engineering. Springer London, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4471-2386-6_183.

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Hua, Xiao, Deqiang Yang, Dongdong Geng, and Qingsong Wang. "The Design of Multiband Semicircle Fractal Antenna Applied in the Wireless Communication." In Lecture Notes in Electrical Engineering. Springer Singapore, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-6571-2_221.

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Zhang, ShaoMin, XiuYun Liu, and BaoYi Wang. "An Applied Research of Improved BB84 Protocol in Electric Power Secondary System Communication." In Lecture Notes in Electrical Engineering. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-27287-5_87.

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Daldal, Nihat, and Kemal Polat. "Piecewise Demodulation Based on Combined Artificial Neural Network for Quadrate Frequency Shift Keying Communication Signals." In Artificial Intelligence and Applied Mathematics in Engineering Problems. Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-36178-5_2.

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"Applied mathematics." In Innovation, Communication and Engineering. CRC Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/b15935-12.

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"Applied mathematics." In Innovation, Communication and Engineering. CRC Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/b15935-196.

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"Applied mathematics." In Innovation in Design, Communication and Engineering. CRC Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/b18737-16.

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Conference papers on the topic "Applied mathematics|Electrical engineering|Technical communication"

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Sarkar, T. K., A. De, S. Burintramart, and M. Salazar-Palma. "A look at some of the practices in mobile communication from an electrical engineering viewpoint." In 2009 Applied Electromagnetics Conference (AEMC 2009). IEEE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/aemc.2009.5430588.

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Giyantara, Andhika, Vicky Mudeng, Huda Septa Natiand, and Muhammad Izzudin Abdillah Afif. "Microcontroller Serial Communication to Analyze Bit Characters." In 2018 2nd Borneo International Conference on Applied Mathematics and Engineering (BICAME). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/bicame45512.2018.1570509845.

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Belcredi, Gonzalo, Martin Randall, Claudina Rattaro, and Pablo Belzarena. "Satellite and aircraft communications through SDR as an introduction to Telecommunications and Electrical Engineering." In 2020 XIV Congreso de Tecnología, Aprendizaje y Enseñanza de la Electrónica (XIV Technologies Applied to Electronics Teaching Conference) (TAEE). IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/taee46915.2020.9163724.

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Furriel, Geovanne P., Calebe A. Matias, Wesley P. Calixto, Sergio B. Oliveira, Jose G. da Silva, and Marcelo G. Narciso. "Acoustics applied in precision agriculture." In 2017 CHILEAN Conference on Electrical, Electronics Engineering, Information and Communication Technologies (CHILECON). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/chilecon.2017.8229738.

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Roa-Prada, S., H. A. Scarton, G. J. Saulnier, et al. "Modeling of an Ultrasonic Communication System." In ASME 2007 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. ASMEDC, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2007-43432.

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Abstract:
This paper discusses the use of ultrasound to convey data from one side of a metallic wall to the other side. A communication channel is established by attaching a set of three ultrasonic transducers to the wall. The first transducer injects a continuous ultrasonic wave into the wall. The second transducer is mounted on the inside and operates as a receiver and signal modulator. The third transducer is installed on the same side as the first transducer and receives the signal that is reflected from the inside transducer. A sensor on the inside provides analog data that is then digitized. The digitized bits are used to vary the electrical load applied to the electrical terminals of the inside transducer, changing its acoustic impedance in accordance with the data bits. The impedance changes, in turn, modulate the amplitude of the reflected ultrasonic signal. This modulated signal is detected at the outside receiving transducer, where it is then demodulated to recover the data. Additionally, some of the acoustic power received at the inside transducer is harvested to produce the electrical power needed to operate the communication and sensor system on the inside. The entire system (ultrasonic, solid wall, and electronic) is modeled in the electrical domain through electro-mechanical analogies. This approach enables the simultaneous examination of the ultrasonic and electronic components. The electric circuit simulation package PSpice is used to simulate the communication system, which assisted in the analysis and optimization of the communication channel. Both simulation and experimental results are presented and discussed.
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Ferraz, Rafael, Sostenes Oliveira, Alan Silva, Jose Nerys, Aylton Alves, and Wesley Calixto. "Construction of an impulse current generator prototype applied in electrical grounding systems." In 2015 CHILEAN Conference on Electrical, Electronics Engineering, Information and Communication Technologies (CHILECON). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/chilecon.2015.7404639.

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Castro, Antonio P., Wesley P. Calixto, Viviane M. Gomes, et al. "Ontology applied in the judicial sentences." In 2017 CHILEAN Conference on Electrical, Electronics Engineering, Information and Communication Technologies (CHILECON). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/chilecon.2017.8229731.

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Mohammed, Mohammed Sultan, and Gheith A. Abandah. "Communication characteristics of parallel shared-memory multicore applications." In 2015 IEEE Jordan Conference on Applied Electrical Engineering and Computing Technologies (AEECT). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/aeect.2015.7360553.

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Rodrigues, R. N., L. S. B. Pereira, G. A. Massuyama, and e. I. Soto. "Development of a phasor measurement unit prototype applied to Brazilian and Chilean electrical systems." In 2019 IEEE CHILEAN Conference on Electrical, Electronics Engineering, Information and Communication Technologies (CHILECON). IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/chilecon47746.2019.8988009.

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Silva, Alan H. F., Uyara F. Silva, Wesley P. Calixto, Alana S. Magalhaes, and Aylton J. Alves. "Conformal mapping applied to encoding and decoding of images." In 2017 CHILEAN Conference on Electrical, Electronics Engineering, Information and Communication Technologies (CHILECON). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/chilecon.2017.8229725.

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